About Health


Dara Torres's Secrets for a Healthier Life

As she goes for her sixth Olympics, the gorgeous gold medalist shares how she got these abs, how she gives herself a break, and what's inspiring her this time around.
dara-torres-purple
Matt Jones
If you ever need motivation to slide off the couch and hit the gym, just think of Dara Torres.

At 45, the superstar swimmer has been training feverishly to make her sixth Olympic swim team at London's Summer Games. Her event: the 50-meter freestyle, which is one frenzied lap. The swimmer (and model, TV sports commentator, author, and mother of 6-year-old Tessa, with ex-boyfriend David Hoffman) loves a challenge, but she's had some tough ones thrown her way in the past few years.

In 2009, she underwent major knee surgery for arthritis and had to take off a year to recover. Last year, her coach, Michael Lohberg, whom she adored, died at 61 from a rare blood disorder. And she has found that her body—as insanely fit as it is—doesn't bounce back from training as fast as it did a few years ago.

So this time around, she's shaking things up and taking a more scientific approach. In her adopted hometown of Coral Springs, Florida, she's assembled a team that includes a naturopathic doctor, a cook ("because it's just me and Tessa, and she wants mac 'n' cheese every night"), a nutritionist, and a pair of therapists who stretch her for two hours post-workout. Recently, she even saw a specialist who analyzed her eye movements and prescribed exercises to improve her motion sickness. Fun and games? Actually—surprisingly—yes.

Over a dinner of steak and Yukon gold potatoes one night in the weeks leading up to the U.S. Olympic Trials, which start in late June (if she comes in first or second, she goes to London), the funny, down-to-earth athlete talked about what she eats, how she got those killer abs, and what it's like to share the pool with a bunch of 20-year-olds.

If you compete in London, you'll be the oldest female Olympic swimmer ever—how do you feel about that?
You know what? To me, it's an honor. People say, "You must get sick of everyone talking about your age," but it really doesn't bother me.

So it doesn't psych you out to be competing against people half your age?
Not many things psych me out! [Laughs] I just try to have fun. I mean, I definitely have aches and pains that most middle-aged people have. What's funny is that I listen to music before I swim a race and while I train. And I'm surrounded by teenagers—everything is hip-hop for them. So I've really gotten into the hip-hop scene! I'll always have my classic rock—the Rolling Stones, the Doors, the Who—but I've made some other playlists with Kanye West, Rihanna, Jay-Z...

How did changing your weight-training strategy in 2006 help improve your swimming?
My old school of training was the heavier you lift in the weight room, the stronger you'll be in the water, but I felt like I was sinking because I had so much bulk on me. When my strength coach first came to see me, he said, "If you're using every muscle in the pool, why shouldn't you use every muscle in the weight room?" Now my core is involved and the stuff I do really elongates my body, and I don't feel so heavy in the water.

Dara, the entire nation is obsessed with your abs. We want to know your secrets.
OK, the first thing is genetics. My brother and I, our body types are exactly the same: ripped abs, big arms, skinny legs. And the second thing is my training. As far as ab sets, the most I do is maybe 30 reps, but there are always some kind of rotational movements using my core while I'm working out. And I train extremely hard, so that's why my abs are so strong—I use my core in almost every exercise I do.



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Alcohol helps ease tremors
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PTI | Wed, 04 Jan, 2012,02:05 PM
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Scientists have claimed that alcohol can be used to treat tremors, a brain disorder that triggers exaggerated shaking and occurs during movement.
A team at the US National Institutes of Health claims that octanol -- a form of alcohol and a colourless ingredient in perfume -- may help treat tremor which can affect people of all ages, though it becomes more common after the age of 40.
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In fact, the scientists begun investigating its use for tremor after observations that symptoms reduce significantly when sufferers drink alcohol. They set out to use a safe form of alcohol that doesn't cause the damage associated with it.
According to them, around 80 per cent of patients have significant tremor reduction from drinking alcohol, the 'Daily Mail' reported.
In one experiment, the scientists gave patients a single dose of one milligramme of octanol for each kilogramme of their weight, and found it significantly decreased tremor for up to 90 minutes.
And in the second experiment, people who had octanol had fewer symptoms of tremor after five hours than those given a placebo.
Tremor occurs during movement, but not at rest. It usually involves the arms and hands, though the head, face and feet can also be affected. In at least half of cases there is a family history, suggesting a faulty gene is to blame.
Other causes of similar tremor symptoms include an over-active thyroid, anti-epileptic medication and drugs used to treat psychiatric disorders. There is no cure though there are a few treatments.
It is thought tremor is caused by spontaneous activity in nerve cells in the areas of the brain that control movement.
One theory is that alcohol may help dampen this activity. It's known that alcohol has some effect on this kind of movement because as well as reducing tremor, it can also cause it if drunk excessively.
'Essential tremor can cause significant distress or embarrassment. Some patients find they get useful benefits from alcohol, but this can give rise to regular drinking above the safe limits, which can damage nerve cells and lead to irreversible neurological problems.
'So, the potential emergence of a safe and non- intoxicating alternative is of great interest,' said Nicholas Silver of The Walton Centre for Neurology and Neurosurgery, an NHS hospital in Liverpool.


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