The Encore Fitness Blog Resources and information from top Las Vegas personal trainers, fitness and dietary experts. Carol Strom.

December 10, 2010

Stay Fit To Reduce Risk Of Stroke

If you want to avoid a stroke, you can start by living a healthier life.

Eat well and stay fit to keep a stroke at bay. Courtesy of NPR

Shed those extra pounds if you’re overweight, exercise regularly, eat more fruits and vegetables and less salt, say guidelines just released by the American Heart Association and American Stroke Association. Oh, and don’t smoke, please. Although drinking a little wouldn’t hurt and might help.

There’s a lot of advice for preventing a first stroke, most of it for doctors. There are specific recommendations for blood pressure targets, diabetic patients (who are at higher stroke risk) and when to recommend aspirin (only for people at especially high risk.

The guidelines, which were last revised in 2006, run nearly 70 pages. The executive summary is six-pages long!

But the most important advice is pretty simple. Living better can cut the risk of a first stroke by 80 percent, Duke’s Dr. Larry B. Goldstein tells Medscape. “There’s virtually nothing that we can do with medicine or interventions of any kind that’s going to have that kind of impact, so that I think is of paramount importance,” says Goldstein, a stroke specialist who chaired the guideline group.

Prevention is key because more than three-quarters of the nearly 800,000 people who have strokes in this country each year are having first strokes.

“Between 1999 and 2006, there’s been over a 30 percent reduction in stroke death rates in the United States and we think the majority of the reduction is coming from better prevention,” Goldstein says in a statement.

If you or someone close to you has a stroke, it’s important to get to the hospital as quickly as possible. Most strokes are caused by blood clots. A drug that dissolves clots can go a long way toward saving lives and reducing disability if it’s given in time, as NPR’s Richard Knox reported last year.

Finally, some hospitals in the country are certified as stroke centers, meaning they provide state-of-the-art care. If you’d like to find one nearby, check out this database.

Original article courtesy of NPR’s Health Blog

December 9, 2010

A Good Turn For Your Shoulders

A Good Turn For Your Shoulders

Courtesy photo from LA Times

Shoulders are a very complex area of our bodies because they are highly flexible joints that move in many directions. It’s important to train them with appropriate exercises, like this one, designed to improve joint stability and muscular balance.

Sit upright in a sturdy chair (you can also perform it standing upright). Grasp a dumbbell in each hand. Begin with your upper arms hugging the sides of your torso, elbows bent at a 90-degree angle and tucked into your waist. Start with the ends of the dumbbell touching at the center of your waist.

Keep your upper arms pressing firmly against your torso as you externally rotate both your arms out to the sides. Be sure you make this movement happen at the shoulder joint while maintaining a bend at your elbow with your forearms parallel to the floor. Pause at the furthest point of the rotation. Slowly return your dumbbells to the center. Repeat for 12 repetitions. Rest a few seconds, then repeat two more sets of 12 reps.

story originally from LA Times | Health

December 8, 2010

Some Like It Hot!

Check this out!

photo courtesy from AskInYourFace.com

Hot, spicy foods that contain curry, chilies, or other hot peppers such as cayenne, help to trigger endorphins.These hormones are what make people feel good and well balanced.   And spicy foods have more flavor, so you don’t need to add much salt – and we all know how nasty too much salt is for the ‘bod!  And if you aren’t sure about that curry chicken or spicy gazpacho here’s one more thing to consider: endorphins that can be triggered by spicy food are like a natural morphine that helps ease pain and provide a sense of well being. The next time you are feeling a little down, try eating something spicy.

November 30, 2010

Diabetes or prediabetes predicted for half of Americans by 2020

image courtesy from CNN Health

More than half of all Americans will have diabetes or prediabetes by the year 2020, at a cumulative cost of $3.35 trillion unless something drastically changes with U.S. health trends, according to a new analysis conducted by UnitedHealth Group’s Center for Health Reform and Modernization.

Study investigators say diabetes and prediabetes will also account for an estimated 10 percent of total health care spending by the end of the decade at an annual cost of almost $500 billion. That’s up from an estimated $194 billion in 2010.

The report, “The United States of Diabetes: Challenges and Opportunities in the Decade Ahead,” was unveiled this week, because November is National Diabetes Prevention month. The study offers solutions designed to improve health and life expectancy, while also saving up to $250 billion over the next 10 years.

Personalized tips for managing diabetes: Take a health test

Approximately 26 million Americans have diabetes. Diabetes is one of the fastest growing diseases in the country, according to the American Diabetes Association. Experts predict that one out of three children born in the year 2000 will develop diabetes in their lifetimes, which will raise their risks for heart and kidney disease, nerve damage, blindness and limb amputation.

An additional 67 million Americans are estimated to have prediabetes. In prediabetes, there are often no symptoms. In fact, the ADA notes more than 60 million Americans do not know they are on the verge of developing this dangerous illness.

Just last month, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released a report projecting that one in three Americans would have diabetes by 2050. The CDC noted the main contributing factors for the increase were an aging population, with diabetics living longer, an increase in the number of at-risk minorities, and an increase in the number of obese people in the U.S.

“Obesity is a significant contributor to the new cases of diabetes. It is certainly a factor,” Ann Albright, director of the CDC’s Division of Diabetes Translation tells CNN.

The most recent report by UnitedHealth addressed a number of strategies to combat diabetes over the next 10 years, focusing primarily on obesity, creating early intervention program to prevent prediabetes, instituting stronger medication programs and educating Americans on lifestyle changes they can make to combat or control their diabetes.

“There is nothing inevitable about these trends,” said Simon Stevens, executive vice president, UnitedHealth Group, and chairman of the UnitedHealth Center for Health Reform and Modernization. “What is now needed is concerted, national, multi-stakeholder action.”

“Making a major impact on the prediabetes and diabetes epidemic will require health plans to engage consumers in new ways, while working to scale nationally some of the most promising preventive care models. Done right, the human and economic benefits for the nation could be substantial.”

article courtesy from CNN Health

November 18, 2010

November is Diabetes Awareness Month

Filed under: Uncategorized — Encore Personal Training @ 5:45 pm

When we think of November, Thanksgiving dinners, pumpkins, and fall foliage immediately come to mind. November is also National Diabetes Awareness Month, a time dedicated to educating Americans about a disease that affects 1 in 10 adults in the United States — and whose prevalence is projected to to climb to a frightening 1 in 3 US adults by 2050, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Diabetes Awareness Month

Diabetes is a metabolic disease that involves abnormalities in insulin production and/or sensitivity to the effects of insulin.  Insulin is a hormone produced by the pancreas that’s required for cells throughout the body to be able to take up sugar from the blood stream to use for their own energy needs.

DID YOU KNOW

Currently, Diabetes is the leading cause of blindness in the U.S., accounting for 12,000-24,000 new cases per year
Diabetes is the 7th leading cause of death
Diabetes is the foremost cause of kidney failure, accounting for 44% of new cases in 2005.
In number terms, it affects 23.6 million children and adults which is 7.8% of the total population.
57 million Americans have a condition called “pre-diabetes” that can develop into full-fledged Diabetes unless diet and exercise-related lifestyle changes are made.
Because obesity is a risk factor for developing Diabetes, as our nation’s collective weight continues to increase, so do incidence rates of Diabetes. Other complications associated with diabetes include visual impairment, nerve damage, poor circulation in the hands and feet that may lead to amputations, sexual dysfunction and skin issues.  Diabetes can also put you at a higher risk for heart disease and bone and joint disorders.

TYPES OF DIABETES Though Diabetes Mellitus is the general name for the disease, there are actually three different types of this metabolic disorder. 

Diabetes Type 1, formerly called “juvenile diabetes” or “insulin dependent diabetes,” is usually diagnosed in children, teenagers or young adults, but can also occur later in life. Diabetes Type 1 only accounts for about 5% of all Diabetes cases.  This type of Diabetes is an autoimmune disease of the pancreas, where the body’s immune system attacks and destroys the cells responsible for making insulin. People with Type 1 Diabetes must take insulin shots or wear an insulin pump to substitute for the missing insulin from their pancreas.

Diabetes Type 2, the most common form among Americans, is also referred to as “noninsulin dependent diabetes,” or “adult onset” Diabetes, though the latter term is misleading since its prevalence is on the rise among children. In this form, the pancreas still produces insulin, however insulin resistance occurs causing glucose to accumulate in the blood rather than get taken up by the cells. People at risk for type 2 diabetes include those who are overweight or obese, inactive, people with family history, low HDL, high blood pressure, high triglycerides, women who had Gestational Diabetes during pregnancy, or who had a baby weighing 9 lbs or more at birth, and certain racial and ethnic groups.

Gestational Diabetes occurs in women who are pregnant. About 3 – 10% of pregnant women develop gestational diabetes. It usually only spans the length of pregnancy, though can put women at risk for developing diabetes later in life.

SYMPTOMS OF DIABETES

Frequent urination
Blurred vision
Unusual thirst
Involuntary weight loss
Recurring skin, gum, or bladder infection
Tingling or numbness in hands and feet.

Be aware that people living with diabetes can also be asymptomatic, so routine doctor visits are important to screen your blood and be evaluated for risk factors.
DIABETES PREVENTION: All of us can lower our risk of developing Type 2 Diabetes by:
Maintaining a healthy weight and waist circumference (<40″ for men and <35″ for women) Eating a healthy balanced diet full of fiber-rich and magnesium-rich foods like whole grains, lean proteins, nuts, beans, fruits and vegetables (especially the leafy green kind). Minimizing intake of trans and saturated fats such as those found in cheese, whole milk, red meat, fast foods, margarine and commercially-baked goods Exercising Not smoking And some preliminary research suggests that breastfeeding children for at least one month may reduce a woman’s risk of developing Diabetes later in life. To learn more about diabetes, please visit the American Diabetes Association website.

November 17, 2010

The Sugary Truth Between Sports Drinks and Teens

Filed under: Uncategorized — Encore Personal Training @ 2:25 pm

Think sports drinks are healthier than soda? You’re not alone. New research shows sports drinks are associated with some healthy diet and lifestyle behaviors among teens… but that does not mean these beverages are healthy.

Certain sports drinks can have the same or even more sugar as soda!

From 1977 to 1998, adolescents increased threefold their consumption of sugar-sweetened beverages, which include sodas, and non-carbonated flavored and sports beverages. Previous research shows that up to 15% of adolescents’ daily calorie intakes come from these beverages, and these increases mirror the growing obesity epidemic in this age group.

A large cross-sectional study, recently published in the journal Pediatrics, analyzed dietary and lifestyle data from 15,283 8th and 11th graders in Texas. Past studies have shown that sugary beverage consumption is associated with weight gain and decreased milk consumption. The authors of this study, however, wanted to determine if drinking sugar-sweetened liquids varied with diet and exercise behaviors and gender.

The teens were given questionnaires that asked how many sugary beverages they drink daily, and about their intakes of healthier foods (fruits, vegetables, and milk) and unhealthier foods (hamburgers, fries, chips, candy). Participation in physical activities (sports teams and gym class) and sedentary activities (watching TV, playing video games on the computer) was also assessed. The researchers found that soda consumption was higher in the 11th grade boys than for the 8th grade boys. The same shift was not seen in girls, although the 11th grade girls drank considerably fewer sports drinks than the 8th grade girls. Overall, the questionnaire showed that both boys and girls drank between one and two sweetened drinks the previous day, and over one-third of the boys and nearly one-quarter of the girls drank at least three every day.

Interestingly, unhealthy food intake was associated with greater sugary beverage intakes and healthy foods were associated with greater intakes of non-carbonated flavored drinks, such as sports drinks. Furthermore, increased flavored sports drink consumption was linked with greater fruit and vegetable intakes among the girls, and with greater participation in physical activities among the boys. Sedentary behavior was associated somewhat with increased intakes of flavored sports drinks, but was much more closely linked to increased soda intakes.

As the research team points out, marketers advertise sports drinks as part of a healthy lifestyle, which may explain why flavored sports drink intake seems to be associated with healthier diet and lifestyle behaviors, while sodas are more strongly associated with unhealthy diet and lifestyle habits. But they also stressed that sports drinks – like sodas – are sugar-sweetened and can just as easily contribute to the rising obesity epidemic in adolescents as can soda.

original article here from fyiliving.com

November 16, 2010

Are you NUTS?!

Filed under: Uncategorized — Encore Personal Training @ 2:45 pm

Well, ummmmm  YES!
If you love nuts, then you are in luck. Almonds are delicious and make a great snack food.

Munch in moderation

The small sized Almond comes packed with sizeable amount of health benefits. It lowers the risk of gallstones, high blood pressure, cardiovascular disease, and diabetes, and helps with weight loss. It reduces blood sugar levels, weight and LDL, or bad cholesterol. Including almonds in your diet, keeps your heart and blood healthy.

 Almonds are a great source of vitamin E and also have good amounts of magnesium, potassium, zinc, iron, and fiber.  And just in case you’ve not been converted to the almond-as-snack yet, consider this little tidbit:  they contain more calcium than any other nut which makes them great for people who do not like or eat any dairy products.

Almonds and almond oil are used extensively in ancient medical techniques like Ayurveda and Unani medicines. Despite being a seed, it boasts of being counted in the premium health food category because of the presence of high amounts nutrients which produce energy.

The next time you need something crunchy, reach for a small handful (about 10) of almonds. Of course like with everything, you should munch in moderation.  Almonds have a large calorie content, being 575.0 per 100 gm  

November 10, 2010

San Francisco bans the Happy Meal

Filed under: Uncategorized — Encore Personal Training @ 10:00 pm

San Francisco’s Board of Supervisors voted yesterday to make SF the first major city to outlaw McDonald’s Happy Meal.

Under the ordinance, McDonald's could keep Happy Meals on the menu if they get rid of the toy.

The 8 to 3 vote means that the board has the votes to override Mayor Gavin Newsom’s expected veto of the measure. The board had already approved the banin a preliminary vote last week .

Under the ordinance, McDonald’s could keep Happy Meals on the menu if they simply jettison the toy or add some fruit and vegetables—but would that really still be a Happy Meal? It would also need to come in under 600 calories, with less than 35 percent of those calories coming from fat.

Yale study released Monday, which says it’s “the most comprehensive study of fast-food nutrition and marketing ever conducted,” found children as young as two are seeing more fast-food ads than ever and restaurants rarely offer parents healthy alternatives.

Here’s a few unpleasant nuggets from the study:

• Out of 3,039 possible kids’ meal combinations, only 12 meet the researchers’ nutrition criteria for preschoolers. Only 15 meet nutrition criteria for older children.

• The average fast-food meal purchased by teens contains 800 to 1,100 calories, roughly half of their recommended total daily calories.

• At least 30 percent of the calories in menu items purchased by children and teens are from sugar and saturated fat.

• At most fast-food restaurants, a single meal contains at least half of young people’s daily recommended sodium.

According to the study, in 2009 children 6 to 11 saw 26 percent percent more ads for McDonald’s and 10 percent more ads for Burger King than they did in 2007. Of course, parents have to actually pay for the Happy Meal. According to CNN, a McDonald’s spokesperson told them in a statement that “Parents tell us it’s their right and responsibility—not the government’s—to make their own decisions and to choose what’s right for their children.”

Maybe the end of the Happy Meal wouldn’t be a huge loss—McDonald’s finished dead last for tastiest burger award in Consumer Reports’ 28,000 person reader survey comparing 18 fast food chains in our October issue. (Though none of the readers surveyed were children.) The Happy Meal still has until December 2011 to reform itself. If not, the return of the 500-calorie no-rib McRib may fill the vaccuum in children’s bellies.

Article originally from Consumer Reports

November 9, 2010

Did You Flush?

Filed under: Uncategorized — Encore Personal Training @ 2:30 pm

Got your attention didn’t I? 
That’s because this is important stuff and you have to read this!!
Drinking water is excellent for the body and really important for your good health. Water helps flush out toxins and other unwanted things that may be lingering in the body.

Don't just drink water because you're thirsty!

Water also replenishes fluids that help lubricate the internal body, keeps you hydrated, reduces hunger, which helps with weight loss, and helps to make skin look smooth and young. If you are not used to drinking water, it may seem hard at first, but very quickly, you will enjoy the clean, refreshed way it makes you feel.

Experts suggest that you should drink 64-ounces of water a day and more if you can. A good way to make this happen is to fill at least three 20 ounce bottles every morning and make sure that they are empty by the end of your day.
 

November 8, 2010

The food-mood Connection

You’ve heard the claims: Chocolate evokes that loving feeling. Eating fish makes you smarter. Pure carbs calm you down. If you are what you eat, as they say, then it certainly stands to reason that food can influence mood and brain power.

How does food influence mood and brain power?

The theory behind these supposed connections seems plausible. Certain neurotransmitters do affect the brain and, consequently, our dispositions in measurable ways. For instance, high levels of serotonin are associated with being calm, happy and relaxed, while low levels are linked to depression and aggression. Dopamine and norepinephrene are reward chemicals released by the brain in response to pleasure.

Particular foods have been shown to boost the production of these neurotransmitters but usually not by enough to make a perceptible difference in the brain. In fact, science has shot down most of the food-mood links accepted as conventional wisdom and perpetuated by self-proclaimed nutrition experts.

Which is a good thing. If you think about it, it’s heartening to realize that you can’t easily influence your mood by a bagel or banana.

“If food were designed to take mood way up or way down, we’d be in big trouble,” says John Fernstrom, a professor of psychiatry and pharmacology at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine.

Still, people have an insatiable craving to believe that eating certain things will boost mental focus, attitude or energy. And believing may just be the best shot at a food-mood connection.

“Our perceptions about food and what it will do for us are very strong and can create a self-fulfilling prophecy, even if no physiological evidence exists,” says psychologist Robin Kanarek, who directs the nutrition and behavior laboratory at Tufts University in Medford, Mass.

Although much remains to be studied, here’s what scientists currently believe to be true and false with regard to the relationship between the belly and the brain:

Sugar makes kids hyperactive.

False

We’ve heard for years that sugar gets kids all wound up at birthday parties or on Halloween, but it’s really just the excitement and unstructured environment surrounding the festivities, Kanarek says. She cites an authoritative analysis published in the Journal of the American Medical Assn. in 1995 that examined the effect of sugar on the behavior or cognition of children. Researchers crunched through the data from 16 published studies in which neither kids nor their adult observers knew who got real sugar and who got an artificial sweetener. The surprising result was that sugar had nothing to do with how the children behaved.

The fact that parents expect their kids to bounce off the walls after they eat sweets is what perpetuates the behavior, Kanarek says. Moreover, many parents don’t realize that the body can’t tell the difference between the sugar in a glass of apple juice or the sugar in a large cookie.

Coffee improves energy and mental performance.

True

This claim has been supported in numerous studies which have consistently shown that caffeine — the ingredient that gives coffee its kick — improves focus, attention, mood and energy, says psychiatrist Joseph Hibbeln, acting chief for the Section on Nutritional Neurosciences at the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism. “Caffeine creates a more perfect association of ideas,” he says.

An irrational fear of caffeine addiction turns some people against coffee, says Marcia Pelchat, a food researcher at Monell Chemical Senses Center in Philadelphia. “It’s harmless because the amount people use is self limiting,” she says. “People back off when they feel jittery.”

Carbohydrate snacks make you feel calmer and happier.

False

Some nutrition experts still perpetuate the outdated theory that a high-carb snack will boost mood. The reasoning went like this: Carbohydrates boost serotonin, which makes you feel calm and relaxed, so eating carbohydrates also makes you feel calm and relaxed. The problem is that a lot happens between the mouth and the brain. For instance, if you have any protein within 12 hours of a carb snack, the protein will block the brain’s uptake of serotonin and the snack will have no effect on your mood, Fernstrom says.

In an experiment with lab rats, researchers found that for the animals to experience any serotonin boost from carbs, they had to put two to four hours between the all-carb snack and a protein meal — and their metabolism rates are about five times higher than those of humans. So if you had one slice of bacon at 8 a.m., then nothing but pure carbohydrates all day, at 8 p.m. you might feel a little boost.

Ironically, preliminary research suggests that some dietary protein — such as that from eggs — may have a bigger effect on mood than carbohydrates, Fernstrom says.

Sugar takes the edge off pain.

True (maybe)

This old wives’ tale does get some support from science, Pelchat says. Studies have shown sugar to relieve pain in infants, which is why nurses give newborns sugar water before performing a heel stick, and rabbis give baby boys sweet wine before their bris. A meta-analysis published this year in the Archives of Disease in Childhood found that just a few drops to half a teaspoon of sugar takes the sting out of immunizations for babies up to the age of 12 months.

However, a study published in September in the journal Lancet cast doubt on this widespread belief. British researchers concluded that sugar merely inhibits babies’ ability to register pain in their facial expressions; the brain activity of newborns as their heels were pricked was actually the same whether they were given sweetened or sterile water.

Any pain-relieving effect of sugar is difficult to demonstrate in adults because they have more complex palates, Pelchat says.

Chocolate brings good feelings.

False (almost)

Whatever mood boost chocolate gives you is all in your head, and that’s OK, says Pelchat, who has been researching the relationship between chocolate and mood for nearly 20 years.

Chocolate contains many components with the potential to enhance mood, but the chemical effect of each of them is small. “It does have low levels of stimulants, but you can get a lot more from other substances,” she says. “The caffeine content is very low, so coffee is better for that kind of kick. The sugar might give a temporary lift, but it’s subtle. And the phenylethylamine that people say is supposed to make you feel in love — well, many foods, including salami, are much higher in phenylethylamine.”

In North America and parts of Europe, women tend to crave chocolate around their menstrual periods, but in other countries, women crave black licorice. To Pelchat, that suggests that “chocolate is more of a cultural phenomenon than a physical one.”

The other reason it may lift mood is because it’s really delicious. “Anything we find delicious is part of a system that triggers the reward cascade in our brains,” she says. “But what causes that cascade for one person doesn’t necessarily do it for another.”

Turkey makes you sleepy

False

People have often heard that foods rich in tryptophan — an amino acid plentiful in turkey and milk — will make them sleepy because it has a calming effect on the brain. But each molecule of tryptophan has to compete with many other amino acids to get into the brain, says Elizabeth Somer, a registered dietitian and author of “Eat Your Way to Happiness.” A Thanksgiving feast will make you groggy, but tryptophan isn’t the reason.

“Eating any big meal, especially if you also drink alcohol, is likely to make you feel sleepy,” Kanarek says.

Omega 3 fatty acids found in fish help depression.

True

At the NIH, Hibbeln has spent two decades studying the effects of omega-3 fatty acids on depression and other mood disorders. The evidence that eating fish high in omega-3s can help is strong, he says.

“These nutrients are as effective as antidepressants in treating people with clinical depression,” Hibbeln says. In fact, the American Psychiatric Assn. recommends that people with major depression consume a daily omega-3 supplement.

However, some nutritionists have gotten carried away by assuming that omega-3s can boost the spirits of people who are feeling just a little down. “When we give antidepressants to people who are a little blue, we see that placebos have an almost equal response,” Hibbeln says.

For those with clinical depression, the recommended dose is three 6-ounce servings of salmon, tuna, herring or sardines each week. Mussels and trout are also good, but less so. If you can’t stomach that much fish, take the equivalent in pure fish oil that contains DHA and EPA. Expect effects within a month, Hibbeln says.

Conversely, eating foods that inhibit omega-3s can make people feel worse. These include alcohol and foods high in omega-6 fatty acids, such as corn, vegetable and soy bean oils as well as the hydrogenated fats found in processed foods. Olive oil and saturated fats, such as butter, are considered neutral.

What you eat for lunch causes that 3 o’clock slump.

False

People often blame their lunch for making them feel lethargic in the afternoon. However, your reduced performance probably has more to do with your circadian rhythm than your diet, Kanarek says. A small snack at 3 p.m. can help get you through, but it’s best to avoid simple carbs and sugar; Kanarek recommends an apple and some cheese.

If you’re feeling cranky, drink water.

True

One of the first signs of dehydration is fatigue, which goes along with depression, Somer says. So tank up before you get dry.

Kristen E. D’Anci, a researcher specializing in nutrition and behavior at Tufts, found that even low levels of dehydration consistently had a negative effect on mood. “Not enough water made people feel irritable, less energetic and often brought on a mild headache,” she says. She and her colleagues recommend people drink 2 liters of liquids per day — or more for those who engage in vigorous exercise or live in hot climates. Water is good, but almost any liquid, including caffeinated beverages, will do. Alcohol doesn’t count.

Nevertheless, remember that proper nutrition, not what foods can lift your spirits or energy, is what is truly important for a healthy living, which, in the long run, will be responsible for overall increased self-esteem and happiness. A custom meal plan made to reach your specific fitness goals is a good way to start!

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