A Healthnotes® Healthy Update brought to you by your friends at CNCA www.CNCAhealth.com Phone: 800.515.5573 |
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RESOURCE FOR BETTER HEALTH | JULY 2009 |
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| CNCA Best Sellers : Immunomax, Green Tea Extract, and CoQMax (CoQ10) | |
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FEATURE STORY IN THE NEWS CHECKLIST COOKING CORNER VITAMINS & MINERALS HERBAL REMEDIES EVERYDAY ANSWERS NEXT MONTH:
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Antioxidants are nutrients that help minimize free-radical damage to the body. Free radicals are highly reactive compounds that are created in the body during normal metabolic functions or introduced from the environment, such as by exposure to pollution and other toxins. Inherently unstable, free radicals contain “extra” energy which they try to reduce by reacting with certain chemicals in the body, which interferes with the cells’ ability to function normally. Antioxidants combat free radicals in several ways: they may reduce the energy of the free radical, stop the free radical from forming in the first place, or interrupt an oxidizing chain reaction to minimize the damage caused by free radicals. Antioxidants In addition to enzymes, many vitamins and minerals act as antioxidants in their own right, such as vitamin C, vitamin E, beta-carotene, lutein, lycopene, vitamin B2, coenzyme Q10, and cysteine (an amino acid). Herbs, such as bilberry, turmeric (curcumin), grape seed or pine bark extracts, and ginkgo can also provide powerful antioxidant protection for the body. An increasing number of antioxidant-rich "superfoods" are available, including mangosteen, kombucha, açaí, pomegranate, goji berry, and chia seed. Free radicals Oxygen, although essential to life, is the source of the potentially damaging free radicals. Free radicals are also found in the environment. Environmental sources of free radicals include exposure to ionizing radiation (from industry, sun exposure, cosmic rays, and medical X-rays), ozone and nitrous oxide (primarily from automobile exhaust), heavy metals (such as mercury, cadmium, and lead), cigarette smoke (both active and passive), alcohol, unsaturated fat, and other chemicals and compounds from food, water, and air.
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