|
| Date |
Type |
Title |
|
Mar 27, 2006 |
Article |
Yale Study: Losing Weight by Controlling Flavor Variety
A major cause of overeating is eating too many flavors all at once, triggering the hypothalamus in the brain to ask for more food, according to David Katz, M.D., of the Prevention Research Center and the Rudd Food Center for Food Policy & Obesity at Yale University. |
|
Jan 19, 2006 |
Article |
More Than One In Three U.S. Adults Never Get A Second Opinion for a Medical Diagnosis
According to a new survey, adults see family/friends and healthcare providers equally when seeking health-related information. |
|
Jan 16, 2006 |
Article |
Yale Study: Losing Weight by Controlling Flavor Variety
A major cause of overeating is eating too many flavors all at once, triggering the hypothalamus in the brain to ask for more food, according to David Katz, M.D., of the Prevention Research Center and the Rudd Food Center for Food Policy & Obesity at Yale University. |
|
Nov 07, 2005 |
Article |
Research: Chromium May Help Some People with Depression - and Carb Cravings
A randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study assessing chromium picolinate supplementation in 113 people with atypical depression found that a subset of patients who reported the highest levels of carbohydrate cravings demonstrated significantly greater reductions than the placebo group on four items on the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HAM-D-29): carbohydrate craving, appetite increase, increased eating, and diurnal variation of feeling (mood variation throughout the day). |
|
Jul 19, 2004 |
Article |
Emotional Eating: Are You Feeding Your Feelings?
When you're happy, your food of choice could be steak or pizza, when you're sad it could be ice cream or cookies, and when you're bored it could be potato chips. Food does more than fill our stomachs -- it also satisfies feelings, and when you quench those feelings with comfort food when your stomach isn't growling, that's emotional eating. |
|
Mar 23, 2004 |
Article |
A Little Music with Exercise Boosts Brain Power, Study Suggests
It's no secret that exercise improves mood, but new research suggests that working out to music may give exercisers a cognitive boost. |
|
Oct 02, 2003 |
Article |
Obesity Can Be Harmful to Your Child's Mental Health
Children who are obese are at increased risk for emotional problems that last well into adulthood, according to several studies and experts on the subject. Obesity and the mental disorders they contribute to should be considered as serious as other medical illnesses, they say. |
|
Oct 02, 2003 |
DrugNews |
FDA Approves Cymbalta for the Treatment of Depression
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration issued a second approvable letter for Cymbaltaâ„¢ (duloxetine HCl; pronounced SIM-BALL-TA), a potent serotonin and norepinephrine reuptake inhibitor, Eli Lilly and Company (NYSE: LLY) announced. |
|
Sep 30, 2003 |
Article |
Stanford research finds gene variations that alter antidepressant side effects
Researchers at Stanford University Medical Center have identified a genetic marker that can explain why some people experience side effects to common antidepressants while others do not. |
|
Sep 19, 2003 |
Abstract |
Abstract: Chronic stress and obesity: A new view of "comfort food"
The effects of adrenal corticosteroids on subsequent adrenocorticotropin secretion are complex. Acutely (within hours), glucocorticoids (GCs) directly inhibit further activity in the hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal axis, but the chronic actions (across days) of these steroids on brain are directly excitatory. |
|
|
Next 10 Articles>> |
|
|
|