Mengenal Ustaz Muda Asal Indonesia yang Dipilih Menjadi Imam Tetap di Mekkah - Begini Selengkapnya......

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Mengenal Ustaz Muda Asal Indonesia yang Dipilih Menjadi Imam Tetap di Mekkah



In March of 2015, the journal Particle and Fibre Toxicity reported on a study of ultrafine particles and the effect on heart function in people who had been diagnosed with Type 2 diabetes. Investigators at Peking University School of Public Health and several other research institutions in Shanghai, China, and New Jersey in the United States, looked at 53 individuals with Type 2 diabetes or prediabetes. The Type 2 diabetics who had been exposed to pollution from automobiles showed different abnormalities in their heart rhythm. During the end months of 2015 Researchers in Canada looked at air pollution and chronic disease. Canada University in Toronto, Canada, as well as various other institutions in Ontario in Canada, reported on the health risk of air pollution on people with different major chronic diseases. According to the British Medical Journal, many individuals living in Ontario between 2003 and 2010 had been diagnosed with one of eleven chronic illnesses. When air quality was extremely poor, hospitalization for diabetics was in a high range. At the same time, outpatient visits for people who had received a diagnosis of non-lung cancers and other lung diseases increased dramatically also. Researchers in this programme discussed the ozone and other kinds of air pollution and the link with Type 2 diabetes. In the following paragraphs, we will look at what could make this happen. Stress hormones, specifically cortisol, raise blood sugar levels in non-diabetics as well as in people with Type 2 diabetes. The American Journal of Respiratory Critical Care Medicine, January 2016 reported on work carried out at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, and several other research institutions in North Carolina, United States. Twenty-four study participants breathed filtered air or ozone-polluted air on one clinic visit. On their second clinic visit, the participants crossed over to breathing the type of air they had not breathed on their first visit. They also took part in an exercise program for 15 minutes. Blood samples collected showed ozone exposure raised blood cortisol and the related corticosterone. When participants breathed ozone, their blood showed molecules connected with oxidation. Oxidation produces free radicals, which cause damage to healthy cells. That could explain the link between air pollution and Type 2 diabetes. More research will help delineate how air pollution has its adverse effects on diabetics. Both Type 2 diabetics and prediabetics need to avoid air pollution if possible and not carry out strenuous exercise outdoors when smog warnings are in force. Uniform air pollution regulations and meaningful penalties for fouling the atmosphere would likely prevent many of the ills we feel from smog and help make the landscape more esthetic. Although managing your disease can be very challenging, Type 2 diabetes is not a condition you must just live with. You can make simple changes to your daily routine and lower both your weight and your blood sugar levels. Hang in there, the longer you do it, the easier it gets Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/9288408

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