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12 basic tips for healthy nutrition that will increase your chances of growing taller
Grow Taller Tip 1 Eat at regular hours. Grow Taller Tip 2 Don't skip any meal Grow Taller Tip 3 Don't forget to eat breakfast. Always start the day with a well-rounded meal. Grow Taller Tip 4 Take the time to taste and to chew your food well. ...

Cheap and healthy nutrition plans
These days, with fast food being such a cheap and quick option, many people are neglecting the nutritional needs that their body's are crying out for. Without the proper nutrients and minerals, our bodies simply cannot function to their full...

Is Nutrition Really Important?
Is Nutrition Really Important? In light of recent films like "What the Bleep Do We Know?" and a collective surge in awareness of Energy therapies and theories, the one question that clients repeatedly ask me in my coaching practice is, "Is...

Nutrition Basics, Part II
In part I, I discussed all of the technical mumbo jumbo of basic nutrition. Here's something a bit easier to digest: If you have to eat fast food for breakfast or for lunch, which I highly do not recommend, but I realize that there...

Nutrition Is Not Common Sense
I'd like to explain an important concept that most online trainers (even the "gurus") don't "get"... Have you ever heard that 'nutrition is common sense?' Have you ever thought about why the United States has an epidemic of overweight...

 
Sports and Nutrition

Sport and Nutrition Sports medicine or sport medicine is an interdisciplinary subspecialty of medicine which deals with the treatment and preventive care of athletes, both amateur and professional. The team includes specialty physicians and surgeons, athletic trainers, physical therapists, coaches, other personnel, and, of course, the athlete. Illness or injury in sport can be caused by many factors - from environmental to physiological and psychological. Consequently, sports medicine can encompass an array of specialties - cardiology, orthopaedic surgery, biomechanics, traumatology, etc. For example, heat, cold or altitude during training and competition can alter performance or may even be life threatening. What about the female triad of disordered eating, menstrual and bone density problems, and the pregnant or the aging athlete? In addition, the management of dermatological and endocrinological diseases and other such problems in the athlete demands expertise and sport-specific knowledge. The use of supplements, pharmacological or otherwise, and the topics of doping control and gender verification present complex moral, legal and health-related difficulties. Then there are the particular problems associated with international sporting events, such as the effects of travel, acclimatization and the attempt to balance an athlete's participation and her or his health. Much of this represents new fields of study where extensive clinical and basic science research is burgeoning. Finally, prevention is an area of increasingly specialized knowledge, interest and expertise.

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Specialized in Herbs, Vitamins, Enzymes, Diet & Weight loss and Nutritional supplements