Tuesday, September 23, 2014

What Are the Benefits of Avena Sativa?

What Are the Benefits of Avena Sativa?

 | By Linda Tarr Kent
Oats belong to the haygrass family. Photo Credit Sea Oats at Sunset image by Mary Beth Granger from Fotolia.com


Avena sativa means “wild oats” in Latin. This plant, also referred to as oat straw or oat extract, was used as a medicine prior to being used as food. This plant may have sparked the phrase, “sowing your wild oats,” due to its effect on sexual stimulation, according to “Prescription for Herbal Healing” by Phyllis A. Balch. Potential benefits are not limited to its impact on the libido, however. Wild oats are rich in B vitamins, phosphorous and calcium.

Sex Booster

Wild oats may be a mild sexual enhancer, according to Dr. Ray Sahelian, author of “Natural Sex Boosters.” However, he notes that most claims for sexual enhancement rely on research done in the 1980s by the Institute for Advanced Study of Human Sexuality in San Francisco, a company that marketed avena sativa products. In the animal kingdom, Balch notes that stallions that are fed wild oats are said to become lustful.
Inflammation Fighter
Wild oats can help you fight inflammation, advises the online-newspaper, The Oregonian. Molecules in oats called avenanthramides help reduce levels of inflammatory cytokines, which are immune system chemicals. Lowering cytokines is a good idea because when levels are high they raise risk for chronic conditions such as diabetes and heart disease, advise The YOU Docs columnists Mehmet Oz and Mike Roizen in The Oregonian.

Heart Health Booster

Wild oats can boost heart health. Avena sativa helps you lower the “bad” low density lipoprotein, or LDL, cholesterol levels as well as overall cholesterol levels, according to a Canadian study published in the "European Journal of Clinical Nutrition." This is due to the main component of the oats’ soluble fiber, called beta-glucan, according to lead study author J.T. Braaten of the University of Ottawa. Wild oats may help reduce your waistline at the same time, which further reduces risk for coronary heart disease, advises Venezuelan researcher N. Reyna-Villasmil, who authored a 2007 study published in the "American Journal of Therapeutics." Avena sativa helps you to lower risk for heart-threatening blood clots and keeps your arteries flexible as well, according to Oz and Roizen.

ADD Helper

If you or a loved one suffers attention deficit disorder or attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, you may benefit from avena’s sedative properties, according to Balch. Herbalists use avena to reduce symptoms of methylphenidate withdrawal and to alleviate mild depression for adults with such conditions. However, science is lacking for this use, making it controversial. Before you try any sort of alternative therapy, especially one that is controversial, you need to consult with your doctor, advises the National Resource Center on AD/HD.

Other Uses

You may see Avena sativa advertised as an aid to help combat osteoporosis because it can boost hormone levels that stimulate cell growth. However, evidence for this use so far is lacking, according to the University of Maryland Medical Center.

Avena sativa also may help you if you have a condition called amenorrhea, which is when you've stopped having a period unrelated to menopause. That’s because it is rich in minerals that potentially promote better thyroid function, according to UMMC. However, evidence for this use is based on traditional use rather than scientific study, so you need to consult with a doctor if you’d like to incorporate oat straw use into your regimen for treating this condition.

Tuesday, September 2, 2014

Give Erectile Dysfunction the Cold Shoulder

Let’s Take Care of Our Men:  Give Erectile Dysfunction the Cold Shoulder

Published Aug 25, 2014
As we age, a healthy sex life continues to bring joy. Mature love, wisdom, and respect can make it sweeter than the sex you experienced as a 25 or 30 year old. But that’s only if you and your partner are also physically healthy and responsive.
In Let’s Take Care of Our Men Part I, we looked at general prostate health and avoiding prostate cancer. In Part II we’ll focus on keeping the prostate and genitals naturally healthy for sex.
Some 30 million men in the U.S. suffer from erectile dysfunction. There can be many reasons for it, including high blood pressure, diabetes, drinking too much alcohol or taking recreational drugs, and prostate cancer.
Current treatments range from counseling to hormonal replacement, penile implants, and vascular surgery.
And there are the oral medications — with their ads featuring twin bathtubs, pulling trucks out of the mud, and mid-life flirting on the porch swing. While such medications are enticing quick fixes, they don’t necessarily get to the root of the problem—or offer long-term solutions.
If your partner has erectile dysfunction, start with an open discussion. You’ll need to lend your support and love: Join him on doctor visits. Stay patient and positive. Find alternative ways to physically enjoy and appreciate one another.
And try a natural approach: Over time, studies consistently show that a healthy lifestyle can prevent and even reverse erectile dysfunction. And that while you’re boosting your ability to have sex, you’re also enhancing your heart, nerves, vascular system, and psyche.
A recent report from Harvard reveals that men who exercise 30 minutes daily are 40 percent less likely to develop ED than couch potatoes. And there’s more. The report’s five natural tips have seen consistently strong results:
  1. Walk 30 minutes a day.
  2. Eat a diet rich in fruits, vegetables, and whole grains.
  3. Keep your blood pressure in check (through lifestyle change and/or medications).
  4. Stay slim. (A man with a 42-inch waistline is more likely to have ED than one with a measure of 32!)
  5. Make your pelvic floor superman strong through Kegel exercises. (A 2005 British studyshowed that combining lifestyle changes with Kegels had amazing results—far more than lifestyle changes alone.)
We feature the time-honored Kegel in our book 500 Time-Tested Home Remedies and the Science Behind Them. The exercise ensures that during an erection the pelvic floor stays rigid and presses on an important vein, keeping blood in the penis.
  • First, locate the pelvic floor muscles, below the bladder; do this during urination. (You use the same mus­cles to stop yourself from passing gas.)
  • Partway through urination, contract those muscles to stop the urine flow. Don’t hold your breath or tense other muscles in your abdomen, legs, or buttocks. When you interrupt the flow, you’ve located the correct muscles. Also, the contraction causes your testicles and base of your penis to rise.
  • From now on, perform Kegels when you’re not urinat­ing. (Over time that weakens rather than strengthens pelvic floor muscles.)
  • Next: With an empty bladder, lie on your back on a firm surface.
  • Count to five, slowly contracting the pelvic floor muscles you located above.
  • Counting to five again, slowly relax the pelvic floor muscles.
  • Repeat this pair of movements ten times for one full set. Do three sets daily.
  • Work up to counting to ten and doing five sets daily.
As your muscles become stronger, do the exercise while standing—to increase muscle control. If you’re unsure how to locate the muscles, ask your doctor to help you.

Stay happy, healthy, and sexy,

Thanks to : http://www.everydayhealth.com/columns/white-seeber-grogan-the-remedy-chicks/lets-take-care-of-our-men-part-ii-give-erectile-dysfunction-the-cold-shoulder/?xid=nl_EverydayHealthMensHealth_20140901