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Saturday, October 30, 2010

Sex 2 times a week Reduce Risk of Heart Attack

Researchers found men who have sex twice a week can lower heart attack risk by half time. Sex is right according to the researchers there are many health benefits. That study of 1,000 men showed heart health benefits of sex for men, but not unknown in women. Men who regularly engage in sex for 2 times a week will reportedly have a lower heart attack risk by 45 percent.
Researchers in the United States also suggested that men who have heart problems also asked about sexual activity. Each year, approximately 270,000 people in Britain suffer a heart attack and coronary disease is still the biggest killer in England. Although more studies that show good sex to physical and mental health, but very little evidence to suggest the effect is to reduce the risk of heart disease. For that researchers from the New England Research Institute, Massachusetts tried to prove it. Researchers keep track of sexual activity among men age 40 to 70 years to find out is there any relationship between the frequency of regular sex with the risk of heart disease.
All factors such as age, weight, blood pressure and cholesterol are diperhitungakn in a study published in the American Journal of Cardiology. Results showed that men who had sex at least 2 times a week less at risk of suffering from heart disease than men who only have sex once a month or less. Factors thought to be protective cardiac health is an emotional attachment to their partners and low stress. National Cancer Institute in America is never done studies that say that men who ejaculate through sex or masturbation at least five times a week, less frequently affected by prostate cancer. Not only that, according to experts from Wilkes University, Pennsylvania, had sex during the winter was reportedly can increase the body's immune system and reduce the risk of getting colds and coughs by increasing levels of immunoglobulin A or IGA.
As quoted from the Telegraph, sex can also increase the sensitivity of woman's sense of smell due to the release of the hormone prolactin. "This is thought to be a binding factor of mother with a newborn child," said a researcher from Calgary University in Canada.

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