Friday, August 23, 2013

Facebook Helps UK Economy Grow by Billions

A recent survey reveals, Facebook contributed £2.2 billion to UK's GDP in 2011 and supported 232000 jobs in recent years across the European Union.

The report claims that Facebook is more than sharing photos or staying in touch with friends. The report says, increasing social media means growth and jobs.

Facebook helps 50,000 small businesses across Europe by giving £4.2m worth of advertising credits and also partnership with British Chambers of commerce.

Facebook also helped in increasing technology sales, with users buying and using broadband services and other connected devices worth £550m and supports 8800 jobs for employers.

Further, the survey says, 57% of office workers use social networking websites like Facebook and Twitter during their office hours for personal use, that results in wasting 40 minutes a week approximately. It is surveyed that businesses could gain £1.38 billion a year during this wasted time. 14 Percent people said that these sites made them less productive and only 10 percent people claimed it to be helpful.

Tuesday, August 20, 2013

Symptoms Due to Vitamin-B12 Deficiency

Vitamin B12 deficiency is rare in young people. It is more common among the elderly and those who follow the stick to vegetarian diet are at more risk. The deficiency leads to anemia because the body should produce large number of red blood cells but lack of vitamin B12 it is unable to to produce sufficient red blood cells.

Causes for Vitamin-B12 Deficiency:
It is because of several causes. It is observed especially in people whose digestive systems does not absorb the vitamin from the food which they take.
  • It may be caused due to dietary factors like:
  • Eating a vegetarian diet, because the best food sources of vitamin B12 are observed in animal products. The people who do not eat any animal products including egg, milk, meat are at great risk, and the people who eat egg and milk are also at the risk of vitamin B12 deficiency, because an average, they consume less than the half of the adult Recommended Dietary Allowance (RDA) of vitamin B12 and the child/babies who born to the mother who is vegetarian may also be deficient in vitamin B12.Poor diet in infants, or poor nutrition during pregnancy and certain health conditions
  • Excessive alcohol consumption
  • Long term use of acid reducing drugs.
  • Some conditions effecting the small intestine, such as celiac disease, Crohn's disease, a parasite or a bacteria growth.
  • Atrophic gastritis, a thinning of the stomach line which effects the 30% of the people under age 50 and above.
  • Precocious anemia, it is a condition in which there is a lack of protein called intrinsic factor. The protein, which is made on the stomach, is necessary for absorption of vitamin B12.
  • Surgery in which a part of the stomach or small intestine is removed.

Symptoms for Vitamin-B12 Deficiency:
The deficiency of vitamin-B12 may not have symptoms. If it has may be mild. Such symptoms include:
  • Fatigue, lack of energy, tiredness, light-headedness when standing up or with exertion
  • Pale skin
  • Loss of appetite, loss of weight, and stomach upset
  • Shortness of breath, mostly during exercises
  • Swollen, red tongue or bleeding gum
  • Diarrhea or constipation
  • If vitamin-B12 deficiency is for long time, then you can have the nerve damage.
  • The symptoms for nerve damage are:
  • Depression
  • Loss of balance
  • Numbness, tingling of hands and feet, and
  • Memory loss, disorientation, confusion or change in mental status (Dementia) in severe cases
  • Difficulty walking

Health Issues for Vitamin-B12 Deficiency:
Anemia, cardiovascular diseases
Sources of Vitamin-B12 Deficiency:
Some food sources of vitamin B12 are as follows:
Beef, breakfast cereals, haddock, ham, egg, chicken, beef taco, cheese, salmon, liver, clams, milk, yogurt, beans, nuts etc.

Generally we do not get this vitamin in plant foods but we can find vitamin B12 in animal products like: fish, meat, poultry, milk and milk products. But in fortified breakfast cereals it is readily available source with high bio availability for vegetarians and some nutritional yeast products also contains vitamin B12. Fish and red meat are excellent sources for vitamin B12

Symptoms Due to Vitamin-A Deficiency

Vitamin A deficiency an important nutritional problem, that occurs when too little amount of vitamin A intake over a long time which you are eating. It is fat soluble and excessive of vitamin A can be stored in liver thus, deficiency does not occur immediately when there is absence of vitamin A in food. But the deficiency arises when the stored vitamin in the body has been exhausted.

It plays several crucial roles in human body. For instance, it is needed for the adaptation to darkness, so the deficiency may lead to night blindness. Thus it plays a crucial role in the retina of the eyes.

It is one of the public health issues in many countries, especially in developing countries in Africa and South East Asia. Mostly it affects pregnant women as well as young children in low income countries. It can occur to individuals of all age.

It is a high risk for pregnant women, especially during the last trimester when demand by both the mother and unborn child is highest. During this period the mother's deficiency is demonstrated by the high prevalence of night blindness. The impact of vitamin-A deficiency on mother to child, HIV transmission needs further investigation

The deficiency of Vitamin A tends to several impairments and blindness and also increases the risk of several illness, in children. Some times it also causes even death for these common childhood infections as diarrhea, diseases and measles.

Causes for Vitamin-A Deficiency:
The primary cause of the deficiency of vitamin is dietary deficiency. The poor intake of food which is rich in vitamin A leads to respiratory infection, measles, diarrhea, and some other diseases among the children. Such sets of wild infections lead  to these deficiency. These deficiency also leads to dryness of the eye called as xerophthalmia, which damages eye cause night blindness.

Symptoms for Vitamin-A Deficiency:
Night blindness: The most common symptom of deficiency of the vitamin is observed in young children and pregnant women is xerophthalmia. These deficiency also increases the severity and mortality risk of infections onset or before of xerophthalmia. The early sign of these symptom is night blindness, they are unable to see in poor light or in darkness.

Bitots spots: These spots are formed in the eye. These are accumulations of foamy, cheesy, material in the eye. These can often occur along with night blindness, and they may differ in shape, size, and location.

Ulceration/Corneal xerosis: The cornea becomes dry and untreated can leads to ulcer of the cornea within hours.

Keratomalacia: This destroys the cornea, which results in permanent blindness. This can lead to perforation of the cornea and also the corneal ulcer.

Corneal scar: A corneal ulcer due to bacteria or fungal infection results in scarring of the cornea. As dry corneal surface is sensitive to infection, if treated early, the scar remains small and will not cause any significant loss of vision.

People with this deficiency tend to have low iron status which leads to anemia.

Health Issues for Vitamin-A Deficiency:
The deficiency in vitamin A tends to many diseases, some of them are as follows: Anemia, cancer, measles, age related macular degeneration, blindness, may also increase the risk for maternal mortality, sometimes even death.

Sources for Vitamin-A Deficiency:
There are many food sources for vitamin-A some of them are as follows: Beef liver, sweet potato, spinach, eggs, milk, peppers, sweet, mangoes, broccoli, apricots, cheese, tomato juice, baked beans, salmon, chicken, carrot, pumpkin pie, etc.

The best source of vitamin A in U.S is fish, liver, diary products, fortified cereals, and the top pro-vitamin sources are broccoli. Carrot, squash, cantaloupe. The other sources which are important source of vitamin A are milk, eggs, which include provitamin A. Most of the provitamin A comes form green leafy vegetables, orange and yellow vegetables, some vegetable oils, tomato products and fruits. Vitamin A is highest in liver and fish oils.