Williams handed Palace extension


The Wales international was nearing the end of his contract at Selhurst Park and hadn't featured for the Eagles at all during the 2016/17 campaign.

Williams returned to Ipswich on loan for a fourth spell last term, but a shoulder injury limited him to just eight appearances in the Championship.

However, the Palace youth product is hoping to make a contribution for the south Londoners in the future after being handed a new two-year deal.

"I am delighted to be signing this new contract at a club that holds a special place in my heart having been here since I joined the academy at the age of eight," the 23-year-old told the club's official website.

"With the club's fifth season in the Premier League coming up I will be working hard through pre-season so I am ready for the challenge ahead at the start of another campaign."

Nicol: Lukaku doesn't fit Chelsea style


Both the Blues and Manchester United have been linked with the striker that finished second in the Golden Boot race with 25 goals in 37 appearances.


However, Nicol, a former Liverpool defender, isn't convinced Lukaku will be able to fill Diego Costa's role, with the Spaniard reportedly on his way out.

"Lukaku for me doesn't fit into a team that predominantly spends most of the time in and around the opposition's box, he's a guy that needs space in my opinion," Nicol said on ESPN FC.

"If you look at Chelsea last year, one of the things I loved watching was Costa and (Eden) Hazard together, playing little one-twos and playing with each other in a small space.

"Lukaku can't do that so if they do get Lukaku, that would change a lot for me the way Chelsea attack."

Vardy pulls out of England squad



The Three Lions will face their neighbours to the north in a World Cup qualifier at Hampden Park in Glasgow on Saturday before facing the French in a friendly on Tuesday.

Vardy will not be replaced, leaving the English with three options up front: Premier League top scorer Harry Kane of Tottenham, veteran Sunderland striker Jermain Defoe, and Manchester United teenager Marcus Rashford.


"Jamie Vardy has left the England squad as a precaution after picking up a minor injury in training at St. George's Park yesterday.

"The Leicester City striker won't play a part in either Saturday's World Cup qualifier in Scotland or Tuesday's trip to France.

"No further players are due to be added to the squad at this moment in time."

England currently lead the standings in Group D of qualification for Russia 2018, four points clear of second place Slovakia, while the Scots are in need of a win to keep up the pace.

Messi ready to sign huge new Barca deal


Lionel Messi has agreed a new five-year deal with Barcelona, according to reports from Spain.

The contract will also include a huge deterrent to any clubs hoping to prise the Argentinian star away from the Nou Camp - a massive £350 million release clause.

Messi, 29, has been linked with with a number of clubs including Premier League sides Chelsea and Manchester City during lengthy contract talks with Barca.

His existing contract expires in 2018, which meant the La Liga giants ran the risk of the five-time Ballon d’Or winner leaving on a free transfer if an agreement could not be reached.

Messi’s father Jorge has been in Spain over the last few days for talks with Barcelona officials, according to Marca.

The two parties have now agreed on a new contract verbally, according to the reports.

They said that Messi’s new deal with include numerous clauses that will see his pay vary.

It has been speculated that Messi’s wages will rival or even surpass the huge salaries many stars are earning in the Chinese Super League and that he could become the world’s highest paid player with a salary approaching £800,000 per week.

The contract will be welcomed by new Barcelona coach Ernesto Valverde as he seeks to regain the La Liga crown from rivals Real Madrid next term.

Costa: Conte has told me I can leave



The 28-year-old striker, who hit 26 goals in 46 games in all competitions for the Premier League champions last term, said that Conte sent him a text message telling him he is surplus to requirements at Stamford Bridge.

Speaking after Spain's 2-2 friendly draw with Colombia on Wednesday, Costa said: "I'm a Chelsea player, but they do not want me there. Antonio Conte has told me by message that I do not follow at Chelsea and that's it. Conte said he did not count on me for next season.


The striker has been consistently linked with a move away from Chelsea, despite being their leading scorer, with a rumoured move to the Chinese Super League in January casting his future into doubt and causing his form to dip in the second half of the season.

The Blues are also said to be interested in a bid for want-away Everton striker Romelu Lukaku.

"I had a simple little message on my mobile from Conte," Costa said.

"It will be because I've done badly this year. It's a shame. I've forwarded the message on to the people at the club for them to decide but it's clear that the coach isn't counting on me and he doesn't want me there.

"I'm on the market and so I'm looking for a team. If the coach doesn't want you, you have to leave."

Costa has also been linked with a move back to former club Atletico Madrid, but a return would be complicated by the La Liga club's transfer ban.

The Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) recently rejected Atletico's appeal against a FIFA ban on registering new players, which means the Madrid club will be unable to field any new signings until next January.

"It would be nice to go back to Atletico but I have to think everything over," said Costa. "There's a World Cup [in 2018] and I need to play. Being four or five months without playing is tough, but people know that I love my Atletico teammates a lot, I love living in Madrid."

30 Ways to Use Coconut Oil, the World’s Best Cruelty-Free Cure-All


There are hundreds of ways to incorporate coconut oil into your daily cruelty-free routine. Love the smell of coconut? Try unrefined oil for a light fragrance, or use refined oil when you prefer no scent. Here are our top 30 ways to use coconut oil:
1. Toothpaste (for animals and humans): Combine equal parts baking soda and coconut oil. Add stevia to sweeten and/or an essential oil for flavor.


2. Hair conditioner: You can leave the oil on your hair as an overnight conditioner or make a defrizzing conditioning spray, as seen here:
3. Skin moisturizer: Whip coconut oil, a couple of drops of vitamin E oil, and an essential oil together for a quick DIY skin lotion.
4. Face/body scrub:
1 Tbsp. coconut oil
1/4 cup sea salt
1/4 cup organic sugar
1 Tbsp. lemon juice
Couple of drops essential oil (if you want it to be scented)
  • Combine the ingredients and apply to skin.
Hope to not fall (coconut) | Swaminathan | CC BY 2.0 




5. Shaving cream: You can use coconut oil instead of shaving cream or as aftershave lotion (check out number 3!).
6. Lip Balm: Scoop a dollop of coconut oil into a small container, and you’ve got a portable, cruelty-free lip balm.


7. Coffee creamer: The key to using coconut oil as coffee creamer is blending it instead of stirring it.


Cat contemplating coconut oil... | Lynn Hasselberger | CC BY 2.0 



8. Frying Oil: Oil up that pan with coconut oil to make any dish healthier.
9. Deodorant: You can use coconut oil by itself as a deodorant, or follow this recipe:
3 Tbsp. coconut oil
6 Tbsp. baking soda
Couple of drops essential oil
  •  Combine the ingredients and apply under arms.
10. Furniture polish: Yep, it makes wood look shinier.
11. Cold sore soother: This truly miraculous oil kills bacteria and helps rejuvenate cells, thus helping pesky cold sores heal.
12. Mosquito bite soother: The same properties described in number 11 help heal mosquito bites, too.
13. Paw and skin treatment for cats or dogs: If your animal’s paws are cracking or he or she has dry skin or a hot spot, try applying coconut oil to the affected body parts.


Coconut Oil | Veganbaking.net | CC BY-SA 2.0 



14. Dog or cat food supplement: Add coconut oil to your dog or cat food to help make coats shiny and skin more hydrated.
15. Makeup remover: Apply coconut oil with a cotton pad to your eyes and face at the end of the day.
16. Chocolate Fruit Pops: You can make these with bananas, kiwis, or any other fruit!
3 bananas or 6 kiwis
12 popsicle or lollipop sticks
1 cup dark chocolate chips
1/4 cup coconut oil
  • Quarter the bananas or halve the kiwis.
  • Puncture each piece of fruit with a stick, place in a freezer container, and freeze.
  • Melt the chocolate and coconut oil in a saucepan or microwave oven.
  • Dip the frozen fruit into the chocolate mixture.
  • Place each piece of chocolate-covered fruit in the freezer container and refreeze.
Makes 12 servings
18. Pan greaser: Use coconut oil instead of questionable hydrogenated substances.
19. Baby lotion: Want to keep your baby’s skin soft and smelling sweet? Apply to skin as needed.
20. Lubricant: Yep, that’s right. Just be sure not to use coconut oil with latex condoms. Try polyurethane ones instead.


Dầu dừa | Phu Thinh Co | CC BY-SA 2.0 



21. Yeast infection treatment (for animals and humans): Coconut oil contains caprylic acid, which is excellent for combating yeast infections both internally and on the skin and in the ears. You can mix the oil with food or apply it topically. For dogs, the dose is 1 tsp. per 10 lbs.bodyweight per day.
22. Butter for baking: Use coconut oil as a substitute for butter or margarine.
23: Butter for popcorn: Same idea as number 22! You can pop the corn using coconut oil, and also use it as a topping—it melts wonderfully. Then add salt for savory popcorn or cinnamon and sugar for a sweet snack.
24: Sunburn soother: Use instead of aloe to relieve sunburned skin.
25. Salad dressing: Try making your next salad dressing with coconut oil instead of olive oil.
26. DIY shampoo (for animals and humans): 
1 cup pure liquid castile soap
1 cup water
1.5 Tbsp. coconut oil
5 drops your favorite essential oil (Try peppermint oil.)
  • Combine ingredients and apply to hair, as usual.
27. Moisturizing face mask: Once a week, cover your face with oil before bedtime (and sleep with a towel on your pillow!).


Coconuts in a veggie shop | Drmarathe | CC BY-SA 3.0 



28. Makeup brush cleaner: The oil helps cut through the dirt on the brushes.
1 tsp. coconut oil
1 cup warm water
  • Combine the ingredients.
  • Soak the brushes in the mixture overnight.
29. Shoe polish: Yep! Make that vegan leather shine by softly rubbing a dollop of coconut oil into it with a washcloth.
30. Cuticle oil: Soften your hands during a manicure with this cruelty-free moisturizer.


Phys Ed: How Exercising Keeps Your Cells Young

Chev Wilkinson/Getty Images

Recently, scientists in Germany gathered several groups of men and women to look at their cells’ life spans. Some of them were young and sedentary, others middle-aged and sedentary. Two other groups were, to put it mildly, active. The first of these consisted of professional runners in their 20s, most of them on the national track-and-field team, training about 45 miles per week. The last were serious, middle-aged longtime runners, with an average age of 51 and a typical training regimen of 50 miles per week, putting those young 45-mile-per-week sluggards to shame.


Phys Ed
From the first, the scientists noted one aspect of their older runners. It ‘‘was striking,’’ recalls Dr. Christian Werner, an internal-medicine resident at Saarland University Clinic in Homburg, ‘‘to see in our study that many of the middle-aged athletes looked much younger than sedentary control subjects of the same age.’’
Even more striking was what was going on beneath those deceptively youthful surfaces. When the scientists examined white blood cells from each of their subjects, they found that the cells in both the active and slothful young adults had similar-size telomeres. Telomeres are tiny caps on the end of DNA strands — the discovery of their function won several scientists the 2009 Nobel Prize in medicine. When cells divide and replicate these long strands of DNA, the telomere cap is snipped, a process that is believed to protect the rest of the DNA but leaves an increasingly abbreviated telomere. Eventually, if a cell’s telomeres become too short, the cell ‘‘either dies or enters a kind of suspended state,’’ says Stephen Roth, an associate professor of kinesiology at the University of Maryland who is studying exercise and telomeres. Most researchers now accept telomere length as a reliable marker of cell age. In general, the shorter the telomere, the functionally older and more tired the cell.


It’s not surprising, then, that the young subjects’ telomeres were about the same length, whether they ran exhaustively or sat around all day. None of them had been on earth long enough for multiple cell divisions to have snipped away at their telomeres. The young never appreciate robust telomere length until they’ve lost it.
When the researchers measured telomeres in the middle-aged subjects, however, the situation was quite different. The sedentary older subjects had telomeres that were on average 40 percent shorter than in the sedentary young subjects, suggesting that the older subjects’ cells were, like them, aging. The runners, on the other hand, had remarkably youthful telomeres, a bit shorter than those in the young runners, but only by about 10 percent. In general, telomere loss was reduced by approximately 75 percent in the aging runners. Or, to put it more succinctly, exercise, Dr. Werner says, ‘‘at the molecular level has an anti-aging effect.’’
There are plenty of reasons to exercise — in this column, I’ve pointed out more than a few — but the effect that regular activity may have on cellular aging could turn out to be the most profound. ‘‘It’s pretty exciting stuff,’’ says Thomas LaRocca, a Ph.D. candidate in the department of integrative physiology at the University of Colorado in Boulder, who has just completed a new study echoing Werner’s findings. In Mr. LaRocca’s work, people were tested both for their V02max — or maximum aerobic capacity, a widely accepted measure of physical fitness — and their white blood cells’ telomere length. In subjects 55 to 72, a higher V02max correlated closely with longer telomeres. The fitter a person was in middle age or onward, the younger their cells.


There are countless unanswered questions about how and why activity affects the DNA. For instance, Dr. Werner found that his older runners had more activity in their telomerase, a cellular enzyme thought to aid in lengthening and protecting telomeres. Exercise may be affecting telomerase activity and not telomeres directly. In addition, Stephen Roth has been measuring telomeres and telomerase activity in a wide variety of tissues in mice and has found, he says, the protective effects from exercise only in some tissues.
Another question is whether we must run 50 miles a week to benefit. The answer ‘‘can only be speculative at the moment,’’ Dr. Werner says, although since he jogs much less than that, he probably joins the rest of us in hoping not. Given his and his colleagues’ data, ‘‘one could speculate,’’ he concludes, ‘‘that any form of intense exercise that is regularly performed over a long period of time’’ will improve ‘‘telomere biology,’’ meaning that with enough activity, each of us could outpace the passing years.

An earlier version of this article stated incorrectly that the Saarland University Clinic is located in Hamburg.
source: well.blogs.nytimes.com

11 Eye-Opening Facts About the Thyroid


The human body is an amazing thing. For each one of us, it’s the most intimate object we know. And yet most of us don’t know enough about it: its features, functions, quirks, and mysteries. Our series The Body explores human anatomy, part by part. Think of it as a mini digital encyclopedia with a dose of wow.



The thyroid is a small, butterfly-shaped gland that lives just below your larynx. Its two halves, or lobes, which rest against the trachea, weigh less than an ounce. The thyroid is under the control a peanut-shaped gland in the brain called the pituitary gland, which in turn takes its commands from the hypothalamus, a region of the brain that works as the communications center for the pituitary—sending messages in the form of hormones to control the release of thyroid hormones from the pituitary.

Once stimulated, the thyroid gland takes up iodide from the foods we eat and converts it into iodine to make the thyroid hormones thyroxine (T4) and triiodothyronine (T3). These hormones are then released into the bloodstream, where they help your body regulate so many processes it would take several pages to describe them all. Generally, these hormones dictate your metabolism, digestion, fertility, weight loss, aging, and more.

Mental Floss spoke to a few experts to better understand this small but powerful gland. Here are 11 things we learned.

1. YOUR THYROID INFLUENCES EVERY CELL IN YOUR BODY.

Thyroid hormones regulate the metabolic functions of literally every cell in the body by stimulating nearly all tissues in the body to produce proteins and by increasing oxygen available to cells.



2. IT'S ALSO YOUR BODY'S FURNACE.

You can think of your thyroid gland as your body’s furnace, and your pituitary gland as its thermostat, says Michelle Corey, a functional medical practitioner and author of The Thyroid Cure: The Functional Mind-Body Approach to Reversing Your Autoimmune Condition and Reclaiming Your Health! When the furnace (thyroid) gets too cold, the thermostat (pituitary) senses it and produces TSH to stimulate thyroid hormone production, which warms you up. When the levels of thyroid hormones rise and the furnace gets too hot, the pituitary gland then slows the production of TSH, cooling you down.

3. YOUR THYROID AND YOUR LIVER HAVE A TIGHT PARTNERSHIP.

The liver is the major location where T4 is converted into the active T3. If your liver is taxed for any reason, it can’t do the job of converting these hormones, and you won’t have enough of the active thyroid hormone circulating in your body. As a result, you’ll feel sick and tired, even if you’re taking T4 hormone replacement. “If you have been diagnosed with an autoimmune thyroid condition, such as Hashimoto’s disease, supporting your liver is critical to recovery,” Corey says.

4. THYROID DISORDERS CAN BE DIFFICULT TO DIAGNOSE.

Often, symptoms of thyroid disorder may go unnoticed “since they are gradual and non-specific,” says Nilem Patel, an endocrinologist at Los Angeles’s Adventist Health White Memorial Hospital. “Left untreated, thyroid disorder can cause disruption in patients’ lives,” he says. Dysfunction in the thyroid can cause the thyroid to overproduce or underproduce thyroid hormones. If you suspect an issue with your thyroid, request tests beyond just your baseline TSH levels, including T3 and T4 levels as well as thyroid antibodies.

5. ANXIETY AND INSOMNIA CAN BE SIGNS OF AN OVERACTIVE THYROID …

Your wee hour tossing and turning, as well as a racing heart and anxiety, could actually be symptoms of hyperthyroidism, or the overproduction of thyroid hormone. Other symptoms include fatigue, weight loss, palpitations, increased heart rate, and nervousness.

6. … WHILE SUDDEN WEIGHT GAIN AND DEPRESSION MIGHT BE CAUSED BY AN UNDERACTIVE THYROID.

When these symptoms seemingly come out of nowhere, they can be evidence of an underproduction of thyroid hormone. Other common signs of a sluggish thyroid include fatigue, hair loss, constipation, dry skin, irregular menses, cold intolerance, brittle hair, slow heart rate, and general lethargy.

7. IT CAPTURES AN ESSENTIAL ELEMENT.

“The thyroid is the only gland to take up and trap iodine,” says Alan P. Farwell, section chief of endocrinology, diabetes, and nutrition at Boston Medical Center.
Thyroid hormones are also the only iodine-containing hormones. The thyroid gland not only takes up this element from dietary sources but stores a significant amount of iodinated tyrosines (a kind of amino acid) to maintain thyroid hormones in instances of iodine deficiency.

8. IT STORES A POTENTIALLY LETHAL DOSE OF HORMONES.

The gland can store a very large amount of hormone—so much that if the gland released all of its hormone into the bloodstream at once, it could kill you (this is known as thyrotoxicosis), says Linda Anegawa, a Hawaii-based physician with a specialty in obesity medicine. Fortunately thyroid hormone is very tightly regulated by constant, exquisitely sensitive signals traveling between the brain, the gland, the body’s tissues, and the blood concentrations of the hormone at any given moment.

9. THE THYROID PLAYS A CRITICAL ROLE IN PREGNANCY AND FETAL DEVELOPMENT.

To meet the increased metabolic needs of a pregnancy, a mother’s brain stimulates the thyroid gland to produce more hormone. “In the uterus, the fetal thyroid gland begins to function by 18 weeks of gestation. Should the fetus not get enough thyroid hormone from either the mother or from its own gland, severe outcomes can occur including abnormal brain development, abnormal growth of the skeletal system, problems with the placenta, or even miscarriage and increased perinatal mortality risk,” Anegawa says.

10. BALANCING YOUR THYROID MIGHT HELP YOU AVOID CHOLESTEROL-LOWERING DRUGS.

“I sometimes see patients with very elevated cholesterol on cholesterol-lowering medication that doesn’t seem to be working. But then I discover that their thyroid function is off-kilter,” says Anegawa. In these cases, she generally recommends adjusting a patient’s thyroid medicines or beginning treatment for at least six to eight weeks prior to checking the blood cholesterol level. This has helped some of her patients reduce their doses of cholesterol medicines, or stop taking them completely. “[Thyroid hormones] may someday be used as a cholesterol treatment, especially for patients who cannot tolerate statins, the most commonly used drugs,” she says.

11. SYNTHETIC THYROID HORMONE MAY HAVE EXCITING NEW MEDICAL USES.

A specially engineered form of thyroid hormone that only targets heart cells is under research as a treatment for heart failure, Anegawa says. Another form of the hormone, which selectively can enter nerve cells, may someday be a treatment for neurodegenerative disease.

8 Things You Need to Know About Strep Throat



Complications from the infection can be life-threatening.
Getty Images


When is a sore throat a sign of something more? Roughly 10 million Americans contract mild strep infections each year and antibiotics typically nip the problem in the bud, but if left untreated, those same infections can progress to more serious conditions. Last December, 24 hours after first complaining of strep throat symptoms, Kevin Breen, a 44-year-old husband and father of three, was admitted to the hospital with acute pancreatitis. During an exploratory procedure, doctors found 1.5 liters of infected pus teeming with streptococcal bacteria in Breen's stomach. He lived, but the medication that saved him ultimately caused kidney failure and tissue death in his extremities—he's now a candidate for partial amputation surgeries in both hands and feet. Here's what you need to know about the potentially fatal infection.

1. STREP BACTERIA THRIVES IN YOUR NOSE AND ON YOUR SKIN.

"The bacteria Streptococcus pyogenes (or group A strep) lives exclusively on human skin and mucus membranes," says James Wantuck, M.D., of leading online urgent care provider PlushCare. "Contact with people who have it is the only way to get it." Strep throat is most common in children ages five to 15 years old; likewise, parents of children in that age range contract strep more often than others.
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2. STREP IS HARDER TO SPOT IN CHILDREN UNDER 3.

The younger the patient is, the less typical their symptoms are, says Dr. Wantuck. Children under three may have vague complaints of abdominal pain and fatigue, and may refuse to eat, for example. It's possible to have a strep infection without a sore throat, and very young children "might not complain [like] someone who's more able to articulate their symptoms."

3. THE SYMPTOMS YOU DON'T HAVE ARE JUST AS TELLING AS THE ONES YOU DO.

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"Oftentimes a sore throat will accompany a common cold, but the other symptoms of a cold —runny nose, cough, congestion—are not typical for strep. That's a good layman's way to distinguish between the two," says Wantuck. Other common strep symptoms include swollen lymph nodes and glands in the neck and a rash.

4. THE LONGER THE INFECTION LINGERS, THE MORE LIKELY IT IS TO TURN INTO SOMETHING SERIOUS.

"A sore throat that doesn't go away after three to five days should be evaluated by a doctor," says Wantuck. Likewise, if you've been treated and the sore throat doesn't improve with medicine in three to five days, it's time to go back to the doctor.

5. SOME PEOPLE ARE CARRIERS OF STREP.

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If your child is getting recurrent infections, either in the same year or throughout childhood, they may be a carrier—someone without symptoms who tests positive for strep throat, according to the CDC. "We can test [carriers] for strep when they're sick and when they're not and it will be positive regardless," says Wantuck. "Antibiotics don't completely eliminate it from these children."

6. STREP COMPLICATIONS CAN BE DEADLY.

Strep throat that goes untreated can progress to more serious conditions like:
  • scarlet fever, characterized by rash
  • retropharyngeal abscess, when pus collects in the throat's lymph nodes
  • post-streptococcal glomerulonephritis, a kidney disease
  • PANDAS (pediatric autoimmune neuropsychiatric disorder associated with strep)
  • rheumatic fever, although rare, can lead to heart valve disease
  • meningitis
  • streptococcal toxic shock syndrome
  • necrotizing fasciitis, commonly called flesh-eating disease
The latter three can be fatal. Last March, a six-year-old Ohio girl lost her leg after flesh-eating bacteria entered her bloodstream—the result of an earlier strep throat infection—and began attacking the tissue, nerves, fat, and blood vessels in her body.

7. OTHER BACTERIAL INFECTIONS CAN MASQUERADE AS STREP.

"Just because you test negative for strep doesn't mean that you don't have a bacterial infection," says Dr. Wantuck. "If your throat is sore for five days or more and you're not getting better, you need to see a doctor. It's probably not just a virus and it's not going to go away on its own."

8. IF YOU SUSPECT IT'S STREP, STAY HOME.

Washing your hands and not being around people who have strep throat is the best way to prevent getting sick. "If you have it, you shouldn't be going to school or work until you're treated," says Dr. Wantuck. As a general rule, strep patients who've been on the correct antibiotics for at least 24 hours, and no longer have fever, are safe to go out in public.







 

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