Posts Tagged ‘hormones’

Molecule Magic In Beer Can Fight Breast & Prostate Cancer

cancer

A researcher said that the beer might be a last option to treat cancer. Magic molecules found in beer is known to inhibit the excess hormones estrogen and testosterone, which is one of the triggers of breast and prostate cancer.

Researchers stated that magical ingredients in beer that can help fight breast and prostate cancer is xanthohumol.

Xanthohumol miracle molecule known to inhibit the activity and estrogen hormone testoseteron excess, which is known as one of the triggers prostate cancer or breast cancer. Xanthohumol also reported to prevent the release of PSA protein, the protein that can spread the cancer cells of prostate.

Researchers have long known the actual effects of xanthohumol inhibits estrogen hormone excess. But this is the first time unknown substances can also inhibit the excess testosterone. Read the rest of this entry »

What is a Depression?

depression

Depression (from Latin depressus, which means ‘killed’, ‘down’) is a mood disorder that occurs in colloquial terms as a state of depression and unhappiness that can be transient or permanent. The medical term refers to a syndrome or cluster of symptoms that affect mainly the emotional sphere: sadness pathological decay, irritability or mood disorder that can decrease performance at work or limit the normal life activity, regardless that their cause is known or unknown. Although this is the core of symptoms, depression can also be expressed through conditions of the cognitive, volitional or somatic. In most cases, the diagnosis is clinical, but must be differentiated from similar expression boxes, such as anxiety disorders. The person suffering from depression may not experiencing sadness, but loss of interest and inability to enjoy normal play activities, and a little experience motivating and slower over time. Its origin is multifactorial, although it is noted triggers such as stress and feelings (derived from a disappointment in love, contemplation or experience of an accident, murder or tragedy, the bad news disorder, grief, and having gone through an experience near-death). There are other sources, such as inadequate elaboration of mourning (for the death of a loved one) or even the consumption of certain substances (alcohol or other toxic substances) and predisposing factors such as genetics or educational status.

Depression can have important social and personal consequences, from incapacity to suicide. The different schools of psychiatry have proposed various treatments for depression: Biopsychiatry, through a pharmacological approach, endorsed by the success of recent generations of antidepressants (fluoxetine flagged by the “happy pill” of the twentieth century), school through procedures psychoanalytic or cognitive-behavioral therapy, through behavioral and cognitive proposals. Read the rest of this entry »