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Fruit juice warning

Linda Hall

SOME nutritionists now condemn fruit juice as worse than fizzy drinks.

They base their criticism on its high sugar content, arguing that although the sugars found in fruit juice are natural they remain sugars.

Drinking copious amounts could lead to a rapid spike in blood sugar levels, which could be problematic for people with diabetes or insulin resistance.

Consuming large amounts of sugar in any of

FRUIT its guises also increases the risk of developing type 2 diabetes, health experts say.

Could be less healthy than we believe.

They also point to fruit juice’s low fibre content, which again can produce a rapid rise in blood sugar levels.

Learn Spanish Statin stats

GOOD news for all those living in Spain who are determined to get to grips with the language. Brain surgeon and neuroscientist Dr Rahul Jandial declared that people who learn a second language get a significant brain boost.

“A remarkable 2007 study in Toronto showed that people who speak more than one language developed symptoms of dementia about four years later than those who only spoke one,” Dr Jandial said.

He is also an advocate of skipping breakfast and the benefits of intermittent fasting. Going without food for a day contributes towards increasing the brain’s natural growth factors.

DESPITE the benefit of statins in controlling cholesterol levels, approximately 50 per cent of those prescribed them have reduced their dose or stopped taking them.

Their principal complaints centre on muscle pain and constipation, although a 2022 study of four million patients published in the European

Heart Journal claimed that statins’ side­ effects were probably close to 10 per cent.

Other researchers maintained that muscle pain, for example, was more likely to be the result of ageing rather than the medication.

Choc defence

NUTRITIONIST Rhiannon Lambert, author of Re­Nourish: A Simple Way to Eat, debunked as a myth the popular belief that chocolate causes acne. “Small amounts of chocolate won’t hugely impact skin health although chocolate with less sugar and dairy is preferable,” she said.

BY admitting underage teenagers, some UK sunbed salons are flouting the law.

This could have catastrophic results for their health, putting them at risk of skin cancer, a news source investigation revealed recently.

The disease kills six Britons each day and doctors

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