Register
Sign In
Help
Sitemap
Home
Skip Navigation
Contact Us
Disability Statement
Could you study for FREE?
Find out how with LMC
Site
Web
Search
Home
News
Sport
Community
Your say
Newspaper
Health Info
enhanced by
Expats
Gardening
Skerton Photographs
Weddings
Submit Your Wedding
Readers' Letters
News Archive
Photo Sales
Family Notices
You need to have javascript enabled to view this page correctly
Thursday, 8th January 2009
News Interactive
Guardian A/V
Slideshows
Web Polls
Your Say
Photographs
News
News Video & Audio
Lancaster News
Lancashire News
News Slideshows
News In Brief
National News
Business
Nostalgia
Family Page
Entertainment
Video & Audio
Slideshows
Entertainment News
Reviews
What's On Listings
Eating Out Map
Eating Out Guide
Lancaster History
Places To See
Reader Holidays
Features
Gardening
Features
Village Features
Guardian People
CancerCare
Top of The Class
Poetry Corner
Family Life
Who's The Daddy
Who's The Mummy
Greek Tales
Fat Fighter
Our Supplements
Emagazines
Expats
Postcards From...
Weddings
Promotional Features
Classifieds
Book A Car Advert
Book A Classified
Buy Photos Online
Find a Car
Find a Cinema
Find a House
Find a Job
Find a Restaurant
What's this?
Health News from NHS Choices
Childhood trauma and ME
"Low levels of the stress hormone cortisol marks out children at higher risk of developing chronic fatigue syndrome as adults," reported the BBC today. It said that if children with low levels of cortisol are exposed to trauma, such as sexual
Diabetes and mental ability
"Adults with diabetes may find their mental abilities slowing down soon after the disease appears," The Times reported. It said that a study found that people with type 2 diabetes were noticeably worse than healthy adults in their semantic sp
Teen sport protects bones
"Playing ball games as a teenager can cut the chances of going on to suffer from brittle bones," says The Daily Telegraph. The newspaper says weight-bearing sport strengthens the bones and keeps them healthy for a further 40 years.
Children keep weight gain
"Childhood obesity is determined before the age of five," says The Daily Telegraph. The newspaper says a new study has found that the majority of seriously overweight children gained much of their excess weight before they started school.
More Stories
'Blindsight' phenomenon
'Podginess' raises heart risk
Genetic disease 'created in lab'
Olive oil and breast cancer
Sleep and diabetes
'Kevin and Perry' hormone
Greed isn't all in the genes
Genetics of obesity
Do snorers burn more calories?
Cold sores and Alzheimer's
Deafness 'could be reversed'
Malaria vaccine shows promise
Bone risk from diabetes drug
Walking cuts breast cancer
Combined prostate treatment
New cancer finding
Panic attack 'heart risk'
Pork contamination Q&A
Hot drinks ease cold and flu
Low-carb diets and memory
News Slideshows
Boxing Day Hunt - pictures
News Video Cast
The 40 big concerns about new stadium
Sport Slideshows
Water Polo: Lancaster champions again - SLIDESHOW
Sport Video Cast
Latest Sport Video Bulletin
Entertainment Slideshows
Robert Forster at Lancaster Library
Entertainment Video Cast
Teen sensations have the 'X-Factor' - VIDEO
Most Commented Article
Travelodge plan for cinema
yes this building is ugly i agree, well at the moment it is, but i supose it could look OKish in a art deco kind of way. However i think this prime pi -
caspar
ADVERTISEMENT
Home
Back to content
Sitemap
Contact Us
Property
Jobs
Motors
Also Search
Featured Advertising