Party foods don’t have to derail your plans to make this the healthiest holiday season ever.
If you understand the answer to the following question, all the food you serve can be healthy: What creates appetizing snacks, desserts or hors d’oevres?
Party foods don’t have to derail your plans to make this the healthiest holiday season ever.
If you understand the answer to the following question, all the food you serve can be healthy: What creates appetizing snacks, desserts or hors d’oevres?
One of three Americans over age 80 develops Alzheimer’s disease.
Patients and families often ask me what can be done to keep the brain healthy. I have come up with a list of what I consider important in maintaining brain health.
The holidays are here and you know what that means: family gatherings, office parties, gifts,…and the most stressful time of the year for many.
Shopping, feasting and visiting take their toll. To make this holiday season your healthiest yet, prepare your New Year’s resolutions now.
Two recent studies suggest that music can relieve migraine headaches in children and relieve pain.
In a study of 58 children with migraine headaches published in the European Journal of Pain music therapy was compared to a placebo pill and an herbal supplement, butterbur.
by Jonathan Galland
Winter conditions such as cold dry wind can remove vital moisture from the skin, leaving it dry, itchy, red and cracked.
Creature comforts such as hot showers or toasty warm rooms can dry out the skin even more. My recent experience is an example of winter dry skin: hot showers left me itchy and scratching. Scratching can lead to marked and hurt skin—ouch!
The idea that specific parts of the brain were dedicated to specific functions was reinforced with the brain research I pursued in college and was one of the key themes in my early publications in the Journal of Neurosurgery.