

Power Foods for the Brain: An Effective 3-Step Plan to Protect Your Mind and Strengthen Your Memory : Barnard MD FACC, Neal D: desertcart.in: Books Review: Five Stars - Wonderful book. Review: Five Stars - overall good
| ASIN | 1455512206 |
| Best Sellers Rank | #507,118 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #1,055 in Self-Help for Memory Improvement #13,235 in Health, Fitness & Nutrition #13,565 in Healthy Living & Wellness |
| Country of Origin | USA |
| Customer Reviews | 4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars (924) |
| Dimensions | 13.21 x 2.22 x 20.32 cm |
| ISBN-10 | 9781455512201 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-1455512201 |
| Item Weight | 272 g |
| Language | English |
| Net Quantity | 249.00 Grams |
| Paperback | 320 pages |
| Publisher | Grand Central Life & Style; Reprint edition (25 February 2014) |
A**R
Five Stars
Wonderful book.
A**R
Five Stars
overall good
D**J
Not any thing special in this book
Expected different foods with their benefits,but it's have general things which is repeated through out the book
J**K
Excellent reports
F**1
I read this book in a very short time. It's compelling, simple, and teaches everything that everyone should know about food for our brain's health. Absolutely recommend it.
F**A
This is solid, usable, reasonable advice to achieve some important and specific goals, mainly maintaining your brain health as you age. This book discusses Alzheimer's, but also includes a discussion of how to avoid or reverse general cognitive decline and function so you can boost your memory and recall in just a few weeks. The information in the book is science based, well presented, and a pleasant and easy read. Dr. Barnard has a wonderful sense of humor and is able to explain complex subjects clearly without talking down to his reader. My mother had a stroke a few years ago. When she was recovering, she said her greatest fear was not the possible loss of mobility or discomfort/pain, but the possibility that she might lose her ability to read and work with knitting patterns. Last year I discovered Dr Barnard's other work and my mother and I went on the diet he outlines in his book 21-Day Kickstart Weight Loss 21-Day Weight Loss Kickstart: Boost Metabolism, Lower Cholesterol, and Dramatically Improve Your Health . I wrote a review of that here: http://www.amazon.com/review/R38EXNJ7X5IP63/ref=cm_srch_res_rtr_alt_1 That diet worked miracles for our health simply by changing our diet. This book will help us extend the benefits of that lifestyle to work miracles for our brain health by showing us what to eat and what to avoid. Dr. Barnard writes in Power Foods about where brain toxins are found in our diet (interestingly, some of the toxins aren't necessarily things to avoid, but things that are a problem if we ingest either too much or too little, or even the wrong form of, for example, some metals). Dr. Barnard writes that just adding an ounce a day of seeds or nuts (for the proper form of vitamin E) will help reduce the risk of Alzheimers by 70%. Add berries, apples, pears, grapes, green leafy vegetables, and beans to your diet. Certainly things we can all do easily! Also, get rid of saturated fats. We all know we need to to this for heart health, and we need to do it for brain health as well. The book also describes brain exercises as well as the benefits of physical exercise and gives some specific things to do. Just a half hour three times a week can make a huge difference. And, very importantly for many of our aging population, what medications can be causing severe damage to our cognition. We found this to be true for my mother. We were able to get her off of her statins from adopting the 21-Day Kickstart diet, and that made a tremendous difference in her ability to think clearly and get rid of the "brain fog" that was following her around like the proverbial dark cloud. We have already made a lot of the changes he suggests in this book, but we are learning some new information to incorporate into our lifestyle, so I would recommend this book even for those who have read other of Dr. Barnard's books. Finding the root cause of cognitive problems can be quite a riddle to solve. I know it has been with my mother. In this book, Dr. Barnard walks you through the variety of things that can be a problem. One of the important things he noted is that not only can medications impact mental function, and the problems can add up as you add more medications. As we discovered in my family, the doctors did not even consider this while medicating my mother, and we had to do the detective work on medications ourselves. Some of the biggest culprits include sleep medications, statins (cholesterol lowering drugs), anti depressants, allergy meds/antihistamines, anxiety medications, pain killers, blood pressure medications, and antacids. Some of these you can just trade out for another kind, but others you really need to see a doctor about and have it managed properly. Dr. Barnard discusses this and tells you how to address the subject with your doctor. We also called our pharmacist and asked him to take a look at what my mother was taking before we saw the doctor so that we arrived to the appointment as informed as possible. In addition to medications, Dr Barnard discusses problems that can arise from other areas, such as food intolerances, depression, menopause (this was a big one for me!), thyroid problems, infections, migraines, cancer treatments, diabetes, and more. There are about 75 recipes in the book. I haven't tried them yet, but they are by the same chef who created the recipes in the Kickstart book, so I expect these to be equally easy to make and quite tasty. Examples of breakfasts include blueberry buckwheat pancakes with veggie sausage and cantaloupe; waffles with maple "bacon;" and breakfast wraps. Examples of lunches include veggie falafel with pita bread and a garden salad; easy colorful pasta salad over mixed greens; English muffin pizza; and a Tuscan wrap. Examples of dinners include red lentil soup with brown rice salad and steamed spinach, tacos with potatoes, swiss chard, and pinto beans with a spinach salad and mashed sweet potato; white bean chili with red rice, steamed spinach, and banana ice cream; and baked ziti with a rainbow salad and strawberry dressing, and warm apple cherry compote. The recipes seem very simple to make without an excessive amount of ingredients or anything excessively costly. I'd like to briefly address the criticism of Dr Barnard's plan that it can be too restrictive or drastic. It may seem that way with an initial look, but to me, loss of brain function and the prospect of losing mobility, cognition, emotions, and the toll that cognitive degeneration can cause on our families are what's really restrictive and drastic. Being bedridden or institutionalized for our later years is restrictive and drastic. Not remembering our children or being able to experience (or even remember) normal emotions is restrictive and drastic. And in light of those very real and unfortunately not uncommon possibilities, Dr Barnard's suggestions are neither restrictive or drastic. Speaking as part of a family that started to make some of these changes about a year ago, they aren't initially easy (it can definitely be hard to give up some of the food we have gotten used to), but if you work at it a little bit at a time and just keep trying, it becomes easier and easier as time goes by (the book has a special section to help deal with food cravings and why we have them). It took way less than a year for our taste buds to change and for this way of life to become not only easy for us, but enjoyable. This book adds to the vast amount of information already out there on the benefits of plant-based diets and is suitable for those who already consider themselves well-read on the subject--there is, of course, some information you will have already heard, but there is more information that is new and important and not available from other mainstream sources. Thank you for reading my review. This is an important topic and I know it's hard for some people to think about some of the changes Dr. Barnard suggests. But it's very do-able.
O**N
Vorab: Das Buch ist auch für Nicht-Muttersprachler (Englisch) leicht zu lesen. Der Autor erläutert nicht nur die Zusammenhänge zwischen dem Gehirn und verschiedenen Einflussfaktoren, sondern gibt auch konkrete Praxistipps, was man machen/ändern sollte. Zahlreiche Referenzen am Ende des Buchs bestätigen alle seine wissenschaftlich fundierten Aussagen. Interessant ist auch das Kapitel über Metalle (wie Kupfer, Eisen und Zink), welche man in ausreichender Menge über die Nahrung (Bohnen, grünes Gemüse, Nüsse, Vollkornprodukte usw.) bereits aufnimmt. Es wird jedoch sogleich klar gestellt, das zuviel von diesen Metallen für unser Gehirn toxisch ist. Man denke jetzt nur an die zahlreichen Nahrungsergänzungsmittel, wo z.B. Zink einfach mit Vitamin C (speziell in Erkältungsprodukten) verkauft wird und wie schnell man da toxische Mengen einnehmen kann. Er geht nicht nur auf ernährungsbedingte Probleme und Lösungen in Bezug auf die Gehirnleistung ein, sondern auch auf mentales und körperliches Training fürs Gehirn. Auch hier wieder zig Praxistipps. Am Ende findet man noch nette Rezepte, wenn auch eher nach US-Geschmack. Insgesamt ein super interessantes Buch voll mit massenhaft Informationen und Tipps!
D**E
Thank you Dr. Barnard for another awesome and inspiring book. You and your colleagues are hero's. So much great and important information. All I can say is WOW.
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