CALL US TOLL-FREE
1.866.293.3904
FAX US TOLL-FREE
1-866-732-0306

August 23, 2010

Bad Foods for Your Bones

Bones have an important role in our bodies. They help control muscle movement and make us into the vertebrates that we are.  Keep your bones healthy by drinking plenty of milk and by exercising on a regular basis.  You can also try to stay away from these substances that are damaging to your bones.

Salt - For every 2,300 mg of salt you eat, you will lose 40 mg of calcium.  This is a big deal considering that the average American has around 5,000 mg of salt every day (double the recommended daily intake) due to processed food and fast food.

Soda - Soda is a complete bone killer.  The carbonation in soda comes from phosphoric acid.  These acids will cause twice as much calcium to leave your body through urination, meaning your calcium levels will be compromised as a result of your need for a sugary fix.  Not to mention there is no nutritional value in soft drinks!

Coffee -
The caffeine in coffee is known to suck the calcium out of bones.  For every small/medium sized cup of coffee you consume, you lose 6 milligrams of calcium.  It’s not a lot, but can do some damage if you tend to drink large amounts of coffee without making up for it with fortified drinks like milk and juice.  Try to limit your coffee intake to control your calcium levels.

Alcohol -
Alcohol prevents your body from absorbing bone building minerals that you eat.  Chronic drinking prevents bone-building cells from re-building damaged and eroding bones.  Alcohol makes your bones weaker and slower at healing after a break or fracture.

Carrots?  - Apparently too much vitamin A can actually affect your health.  Vitamin A is essential for good vision and a healthy immune system, but the average diet is already naturally high in vitamin A.  If you add multivitamins to your diet then you are actually getting way more than the recommended daily dose of 5,000 IUs.  Too much vitamin A has been linked to bone loss and an increase in the risk of hip fracture.  Experts believe that excessive vitamin A can trigger an increase in osteoclasts (cells that break down bone).  In addition they also believe that vitamin A can interfere with vitamin D, a vitamin that is important to preserving bone.

Pharmapassport.com, a Canadian Internet-based pharmacy intermediary (license #BC X23), provides customers with low prices and long-term prescriptions drugs. All Canadian prescriptions are filled by a professionally registered pharmacist. For more information on how to order Canada drugs safely and securely call 1-866-293-3904 or visit http://www.pharmapassport.com/ – a trusted and reliable Canadian online pharmacy that has filled over 1 million prescriptions.

August 10, 2009

Wooden Bones?

Well I’ve heard of some interesting procedures, but this is one of those that you always wonder how it works. Scientists have been able to make artificial bone from wood. Yes, that’s right wood. It’s that natural resource that we get when we chop down trees, it what our homes are made of, and now it’s what could replace some of your bone.

The procedure would turn blocks of wood, into functioning artificial bone. Scientists plan to implant these wooden bone substitute into large animals before eventually placing them in humans. The goal of the wooden bone substitute is to hopefully allow your actual bones to heal more quickly and even more securely after a break, more so than the current metal and ceramic options.

Now if you are as shocked as me you’re probably asking yourself why bone, isn’t metal a better alternative? Well apparently researches chose wood because it closely resembles the physical structure of natural bone, which we are unable to reproduce with our current technology.

The process requires a block of wood to be heated until there is only pure carbon (charcoal basically) left. The wood is then sprayed with calcium which combines with the carbon resulting in calcium carbide. Then more chemical and physical steps change the calcium carbide into carbonated hydroxyapatite. This can then be implanted and will function as the artificial bone.

This process takes about a week to finish and roughly $850 for a single block, which is about one bone implant.

Pharmapassport.com, a Canadian Internet-based pharmacy intermediary (license #BC X23), provides customers with low prices and long-term prescriptions drugs. All Canadian prescriptions are filled by a professionally registered pharmacist. For more information on how to order Canada drugs safely and securely call 1-866-293-3904 or visit http://www.pharmapassport.com/ – a trusted and reliable Canadian online pharmacy that has filled over 1 million prescriptions.