Love the bag...
Wednesday, February 2, 2011
Stilettos give women shapelier legs than flats?
Posted on 2:39 PM by dvdsvdsdv
According to a new study of 18 to 33-year-olds has shown those who walked in high heels activated their inner and outer calf muscles much more evenly than those who used flatter shoes.
A shorter heel, worn by half the subjects, led to them having bigger inner calf muscles because they are exercised more, according to the findings published in the Royal Society journal Biology Letters.
Professor Anna Ahn, of Harvey Mudd College in Claremont, California, and colleagues said: 'Similar to pulling a door-closer to its hinge, the ankle must be extended by a greater force when muscles pull closer to the ankle joint with a shorter heel.
'Heel length may determine calf muscle size in humans.
'In order to generate these higher forces at the ankle, these individuals activate their relatively thicker muscles for a longer duration.'
In the study the researchers analysed ten sedentary people, five men and five women, to ensure athletic training was not a factor in their performance.
They added: 'People come in different shapes and sizes. In particular, calf muscle size in humans varies considerably.
'Some people have short, stout lower leg muscles, while others have long, slender leg muscles.
'A possible cause for these differences in calf muscle size is the difference in neural signals received by the muscles, because muscles respond to increased neural activation with hypertrophy (excessive development).
'These individuals would also generate relatively higher muscle forces when walking, since muscle force increases with amplitude of muscle activity.'
Two years ago Italian researchers found wearing a pair of moderately high heels can tone the body, condition muscles and even improve a woman's sex life.
The study involved measuring electrical activity in the pelvic muscles of women when they held their feet at different angles.
Those who held their feet at a 15-degree angle to the ground, the equivalent of a 7cm heel, showed up to 15% less electrical activity in their pelvic muscles.
The results suggest the muscles are more relaxed when women wear higher heels, increasing their strength and ability to contract during lovemaking.
High heels have been a fashion item since the 1600s but over the past 50 years they have been blamed for a variety of health problems ranging from bunions, stress fractures and knee pain to an increased risk of arthritis.
Source: Daily Mail
A shorter heel, worn by half the subjects, led to them having bigger inner calf muscles because they are exercised more, according to the findings published in the Royal Society journal Biology Letters.
Professor Anna Ahn, of Harvey Mudd College in Claremont, California, and colleagues said: 'Similar to pulling a door-closer to its hinge, the ankle must be extended by a greater force when muscles pull closer to the ankle joint with a shorter heel.
'Heel length may determine calf muscle size in humans.
'In order to generate these higher forces at the ankle, these individuals activate their relatively thicker muscles for a longer duration.'
In the study the researchers analysed ten sedentary people, five men and five women, to ensure athletic training was not a factor in their performance.
They added: 'People come in different shapes and sizes. In particular, calf muscle size in humans varies considerably.
'Some people have short, stout lower leg muscles, while others have long, slender leg muscles.
'A possible cause for these differences in calf muscle size is the difference in neural signals received by the muscles, because muscles respond to increased neural activation with hypertrophy (excessive development).
'These individuals would also generate relatively higher muscle forces when walking, since muscle force increases with amplitude of muscle activity.'
Two years ago Italian researchers found wearing a pair of moderately high heels can tone the body, condition muscles and even improve a woman's sex life.
The study involved measuring electrical activity in the pelvic muscles of women when they held their feet at different angles.
Those who held their feet at a 15-degree angle to the ground, the equivalent of a 7cm heel, showed up to 15% less electrical activity in their pelvic muscles.
The results suggest the muscles are more relaxed when women wear higher heels, increasing their strength and ability to contract during lovemaking.
High heels have been a fashion item since the 1600s but over the past 50 years they have been blamed for a variety of health problems ranging from bunions, stress fractures and knee pain to an increased risk of arthritis.
Source: Daily Mail
Mr Nigeria 2011 forms out
Posted on 2:26 PM by dvdsvdsdv
Mr Nigeria 2010, Kenneth Okoli |
A frail looking Ngozi Nwosu.
Posted on 2:11 PM by dvdsvdsdv
This is a recent pic of the actress...looking so different from lively and robust peaceful peace.
Listen to 24hrs of Kennis Mobile Radio
Posted on 2:10 PM by dvdsvdsdv
Kennis Mobile Radio International is broadcast Live to various mobile Model such as (HTC PHONES,Nokia, Palm Tops, I-Phones, Samsung, Sony Ericsson, Blackberry, 24/7 & also Web users via their Facebook & Twitter on Laptop's, PC's, Apple I-Pad, I-pad tablet's.
Kennis Radio Mobile uses multi-bits rates, which means your quality of Sound is determined by your Mobile Phone or Web Available Bandwidth from Your Provider.
To listen live go here
Kennis Radio Mobile uses multi-bits rates, which means your quality of Sound is determined by your Mobile Phone or Web Available Bandwidth from Your Provider.
To listen live go here
CNN's Anderson Cooper, crew attacked in Cairo, Egypt (video)
Posted on 1:57 PM by dvdsvdsdv
Sleek Editor Symon Adeji set to wed events planner, Lara Rawa
Posted on 1:10 PM by dvdsvdsdv
Symon Adeji and Lara Rawa
Sleek Magazine Editor, Symon Adejo, is set to wed the love of his life, Lara Rawa, the top events planner behind Lagos based events company, Events Evendi. The two, who have been engaged for months now are planning to walk down the aisle in March 2011.Congrats to them.
BTW, whatever happened to Sleek Magazine? Haven't seen it around in a while...
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