Take folic acid to prevent stroke

According to a new study, folic acid could help prevent strokes, especially in those people, who have high blood pressure. The study has been published in the Journal of the American Medical Association. It was conducted on 20,000 Chinese adults, who were suffering from high blood pressure.

It was found by the researchers in a 4.5-year period that the patients, who were given folic acid supplements together with the anti-hypertension drug enalapril had less chances of having a stroke compared to those who took the medication alone.

Additionally, the cardiovascular benefits of folic acid were also recorded. Pills could be taken to get more folates, but citrus fruits, green leafy vegetables and beans; grain-based foods like rice, pasta and cornmeal are also good sources of folates.

Vitamin D Supplements ineffective in lowering Blood Pressure

After multivitamins, vitamin D supplements are the second most prescribed vitamin in the country. A JAMA Internal Medicine published study has indicated that vitamin D is not effective in lowering blood pressure.

In the study, the researchers collected blood pressure data from 46 different clinical trials having more than 4,541 participants that used vitamin D supplements for at least a month. The researchers did not find any effect from vitamin D in the systolic and diastolic blood pressure.

The researchers said there is a link between low levels of vitamin D and heart diseases. As per the National Institutes of Health (NIH), there is no sufficient proof to find out that how levels of vitamin D could increase risk or protect against cancer.

Over-sharing On Social Media More Harmful than Good: Study

Researchers at the University of Michigan Health System, after conducting a study recommended that parents must limit the public exposure of their kid’s photos and stories on social media.

According to Headlines and Global News, researchers of the study said that ‘Sharenting’ can cause more harm than good.

The study researchers said that most kids already have a presence in social media created by their parents by the time they grow old enough to use social media themselves.

Nowadays it has become a norm to share every detail of one’s life and children on the social media either to gain support in challenging times or for sharing joyous moments.

Researchers said that they are trying to study the issue in details to know and better understand its pros and cons.

Malaria kills children by causing severe brain swelling: Study

A new study has revealed that severe form of malaria proves fatal in children when brain swelling occurs. Malaria is a mosquito-borne infectious disease caused by parasitic (a group of single-celled microorganism), which is spread by mosquito. Its symptoms include fever, fatigue, vomiting and headaches.

In severe cases, it causes coma or death. The disease is transmitted by the bite of female mosquito and the symptoms begin ten to fifteen days after the bite.

The bite of female mosquito is a major killer in the tropics. There were 198 million cases of malaria in 2013 worldwide and about 500,000 people, mostly children, died in Africa due to the disease.

CCIEE to work with Paulson Institute to fight Air Pollution

On Wednesday, vice-chairman of China Center for International Economic Exchanges (CCIEE) said that the comprehensive association with the mission of promoting international economic research will work together Paulson Institute of the United States to fight air pollution.

Henry Paulson, former United State Secretary of the Treasury and current chairman of the Paulson Institute, visited Baoding in Hebei Province to know about air pollution in the city. During the visit, Paulson said, “The Paulson Institute has been committed to promoting Sino-U.S. ties in the fields of economics and environmental protection and hopes to provide as much assistance as it can to the air pollution efforts in Hebei”.

Researchers Say Last Year’s Yeti Hair Samples were of Brown Bear

Last year, Bryan Sykes, genetics professor at Oxford, discovered that hair samples that he and his team analyzed were not of Yeti or Abominable Snowman in the Himalayas. After that, Sykes said that the samples belonged to an extinct species of Polar bear. Now, a group of scientists have re-analyzed the hair samples and found that the samples do not belong to any extinct species of bear.

Eliecer Gutierrez, a scholar of the Smithsonian Institution, and Ronald Pine, from the University of Kansas and a researcher of the new study, said Sykes' claims were not true. While talking to NBC News, they said that after re-analyzing the hair samples, they discovered the samples belonged to brown bear that lives in Himalayan.

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