parfait wrote:Melissa wrote:parfait wrote:The solution for all things (most of it anyways), is losing weight, working out and eating good, non processed food. Instead of taking supplements; eat better.
Even for people who eat the perfect diet, supplements are still important. I work with an MD who was THE picture of health, ate a great diet, stayed in awesome shape, took care of himself, and guess what? He was diagnosed with pernicious anemia, a bit too late for the irreversible damage on nerve cells... he walks with crutches now (after not being able to walk at all, let alone even stand) and will for the rest of his life. All because of B12 deficiency, despite eating right and taking care of himself.
As for the sleep apnea mentioned, yes, do what you can to stop the effects of that, because it can cause other major problems, especially for your heart.
Sure, you'll always have the odd cases, but in general will a quality, non processed food coupled with working out, will greatly diminish the probability of said diseases. Again, the sleep devices is just a quick fix to the fact that your body is most likely struggling because of weight problems.

Except that sleep apnoea can affect metabolism such that you put on weight and have a great deal of difficulty losing it. One of the things I really noticed when my ex started using the CPAP was that without changing his diet or excercise, he dropped about 10k over a month. After that, he went on the Atkins diet, which he had been on before, and the effects were much more noticeable.
According to his mother, he's been a chronic sleep talker and walker since he was 10, and he was a skinny kid and teenager. The first thing that happened when he went on the machine was that he stopped talking in his sleep, and he didn't get up during the night. He's had high blood pressure since he was 18, and has had a weight problem since his early-to-mid twenties. I suspect both those things were caused by the sleep apnoea - he was diagnosed as having a breathing interruption 115 times per hour, which is ridiculously high. His doctor said it effectively meant he'd been getting less than an hour of 'real' sleep per night for 20-30 years or so. Most of his many health issues are linked to the sleep apnoea, and with the CPAP, all of them have been steadily reducing.
Sometimes it's more complicated than 'quit smoking, lose weight, don't drink so much, take an asprin and call me in the morning.'
Why treat life as a journey to the grave with the intention of arriving in an attractive & well-preserved body? Get there by skidding in sideways, a glass of wine in one hand, chocolate in the other, body totally worn out, screaming WOOHOO! What a ride!