Reader\'s Digest Canada - 10.2019

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Statins May Help
Prevent Glaucoma

Research shows that
many patients who are
prescribed statins
don’t continue taking
them for the long run.
Sometimes, this is
because of misconcep-
tions about their risks
and benefits. A JAMA
Ophthalmology study
with over 130,000 par-
ticipants found an asso-
ciation between high
cholesterol and a
greater likelihood of
developing glaucoma,
possibly due to impaired
blood flow to the optic
nerve. However, the risk
was 21 per cent lower
among people who’d
used statins for five
years or longer. By itself,
glaucoma protection is
not sufficient reason to
start taking statins. But
if you’re already taking
them to cut your
chances of a heart
attack or stroke, then
knowing they might
spare you from eye
problems as well could
help motivate you to
stay the course.

Orthorexia Nervosa: Who’s at Risk?


Striving to eat healthily can, ironically, become an
unhealthy obsession. People with the condition
known as orthorexia nervosa are fixated on con-
suming food in a way that they consider “pure,”
“clean” or “healthy”— to the point where their
well-being suffers. They can, for example, become
malnourished. “That’s because as the disorder pro-
gresses, patients often become increasingly restric-
tive in what they’ll eat,” says Sarah McComb, a clini-
cal psychology student at York University in Toronto.
“Some cut out entire food groups or fats or carbs.”
Orthorexia isn’t yet listed in psychiatric manuals,
but it is described in scientific journals. McComb
and her supervisor, Jennifer Mills, recently pub-
lished a review of the research to date into the
possible risk factors. Those that were most reliably
associated with orthorexia included perfectionism,
dieting, obsessive-compulsive traits, mental health
struggles and poor body image. Interestingly, and
in contrast to many other eating disorders, gender
did not seem to affect risk.
Orthorexia warning signs include spending
many hours each day planning and preparing
meals, losing weight unin-
tentionally, eating habits
that interfere with your
personal relationships and
feeling distressed when
you don’t know exactly
how your meal was made
and what it contains. “If
you can check off a lot of
these things then it might
be a good time to talk to a
mental health profes-
sional,” McComb says.

reader’s digest


30 october 2019

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