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CNN —The food you eat may be affecting your body’s ability to fight cancer cells in the colon, according to a new study. The potential culprit: an overabundance of certain omega-6 fatty acids — perhaps from ultraprocessed foods in your diet — that may hinder the anti-inflammatory and tumor-fighting properties of another essential fatty acid, omega-3. Linoleic acid, an omega-6 fatty acid that is found in corn, peanut, soybean, safflower and sunflower oils, is the most common omega-6 in the US food supply. “It’s a leap to say that omega-6s from ultraprocessed foods are the cause. Many ultraprocessed foods are made with soybean and other vegetable oils that contain higer levels of omega-6 fatty acids.
Persons: , Timothy Yeatman, Yeatman, , Bill Harris, it’s, Harris, chia, gastroenterologist Dr, Robin Mendelsohn, Mendelsohn, codirector, ” Yeatman, Ganesh Halade, Halade, ” Halade, Tom Brenna, ” Brenna Organizations: CNN, British Society of Gastroenterology, University of South, Tampa General Hospital Cancer Institute, Sanford School of Medicine, Acid Research, National Cancer Institute, Center, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, Dell Medical, University of Texas, American Heart Association, AHA, Harvard Medical Locations: Gut, University of South Florida, Tampa, University of South Dakota, Sioux Falls , South Dakota, United States, New York City, Austin
We asked dermatologists whether Eto's skincare routine or just luck and genetics have helped her achieve flawless skin. AdvertisementEto has had a skincare routine for 60 yearsEto has followed a daily skincare routine for the last 60 years, using specific products from a Japanese brand, Manavis, for the past 15 years. Alster said that Eto's skincare routine has likely "minimally" contributed to her wrinkle-free skin, and having so many steps is unnecessary. Plus, Vitamin C helps protect the skin against the sun and has been linked to decreases in wrinkles, according to Oregon State University. Plus, research suggests that gut health and skin health are interconnected.
Persons: , Yuri Lee, Toshiko, Lee, Derek V, Chan, doesn't, Tina Alster, Alster, Miki, Dr, Will Bulsiewicz Organizations: Service, Business, Eto, pats, American Academy of Dermatology, BI, Skin Cancer Foundation, Washington Institute of, Oregon State University Locations: LA, Manhattan
“It’s an old wives’ tale,” said Simon Travis, professor of clinical gastroenterology at the University of Oxford in the United Kingdom. “If you swallow chewing gum, it’ll go through the stomach, and go through into the intestine, and pass out unchanged at the other end,” Travis said. “There are cases of chewing gum lodging in the intestines of infants and even children if they’ve swallowed a lot, and then it causes an obstruction. “Chicle is a natural latex that comes from something called the Chico sapote tree, or sapodilla tree,” Mathews explained. When to worry about swallowing gumUnless you are in pain or have swallowed a lot of gum, Travis and Carroll said you don’t need to go to the doctor if you accidentally swallow a piece whole.
Persons: , Simon Travis, , Travis, ” Travis, they’ve, I’ve, Dr, Aaron Carroll, Carroll, wouldn’t, Jennifer Mathews, William Wrigley, Mayans, Mathews, ” Mathews, ” Carroll, Leila Kia, ” Kia, Kia Organizations: CNN, University of Oxford, Indiana University, Trinity University, Central America, Northwestern University’s Feinberg School of Medicine, Kia Locations: United Kingdom, , San Antonio , Texas, Americas, Mexico, Central, chico, Pima, United States, Chicago
How often should you poop?
  + stars: | 2023-07-12 | by ( Kristen Rogers | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +6 min
CNN —Everyone poops, but it turns out we don’t all need to poop every day. It’s helpful to know what your poop looks like in addition to just how often you poop. But if you’re excessively straining when trying to poop or feeling like you haven’t totally emptied your bowel, you may need to make changes to either poop more often or have healthier stool quality, experts said. But if we’re stressed, hormones and nervous system changes can prevent poop from moving toward the rectum, resulting in constipation. But don’t delay — the right time to poop is when you’re feeling the urge to do so, experts said.
Persons: Folasade, , ’ ”, Michael Camilleri, , Trisha Pasricha, ” Camilleri, you’re, Pasricha, May, Camilleri, , we’re Organizations: CNN, David Geffen School of Medicine, University of California, gastroenterology, hepatology, Mayo Clinic, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Food and Drug Administration, kiwis Locations: Los Angeles, Minnesota, Massachusetts
Scientists may have found a culprit for what can trigger Crohn’s disease. Cadwell and his colleagues discovered the norovirus connection to Crohn’s fortuitously when they were studying mice that had been engineered to develop the intestinal disease. Many of the mice had gotten norovirus and “the mice developed intestinal abnormalities only in the presence of a viral infection,” Cadwell explained. On a hunch, the researchers treated the mice that had developed the rodent version of Crohn’s with the human version of the API5 protein. Crohn's treatments can worsen infectionsThat would be welcome news to Heather Schlueter, who learned three years ago that her excruciating abdominal pain was due to Crohn’s disease.
CNN —It was a first for actor Ryan Reynolds, who allowed a video crew to capture his colonoscopy screening on camera to raise awareness of the increase in colon cancer diagnoses among people under 50. The new video, made in partnership with the Colorectal Cancer Alliance and another colon cancer awareness organization, Lead From Behind, did not show the colonoscopy procedure itself, for either Reynolds or McElhenney. “I have a pretty little colon,” Couric said with a sleepy chuckle as she watched the video projection from the scope inside her colon. “You didn’t put the scope in yet, did you?” asked Couric, whose husband had died from colon cancer at age 42 in 1998. However, like Reynolds and McElhenney, most people are more heavily sedated and rarely wake up during a colonoscopy.
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