Archive for the ‘Health Tip of the Week’ Category

Health Tip of the Week

Posture & Breathing Break – November 23, 2009

Set your desktop computer, cell phone or digital watch to chime every hour  to remind you to take a healthy posture and breathing break. When you hear the chime, do a quick physical inventory.

Are your shoulders down and back? Are you sitting comfortably erect, with an inward curve in your lower spine? Are both of your feet flat on the floor? After you’ve checked and adjusted your posture, close your eyes and take three deep, slow belly-breaths.

That’s all there is to it! You’ll go back to what you were doing with a calmer spirit and a more comfortable body.

 
 
 
 
 
 

 

 

Health Tip of the Week

It’s a Brand New Day – November 16, 2009

If troubling thoughts are keeping you from sleeping, write them down outside of bed, then resign yourself to the fact that you have done all you can for the moment and commit to re-examining them in the morning. Fears, which seem exaggerated at night when we are surrounded by darkness and lack of resources, are often more manageable in the light of day.

 

Health Tip of the Week

If you like it, do it! - November 9, 2009

 

Getting in shape just because “it’s good for you” can be a potentially boring proposition.On the other hand, embarking on an exercise program with a concrete, enjoyable goal is an entirely different matter. Hike a canyon or a mountain trail; book a raft trip or a biking tour; take the family snorkeling or to a beach where volleyball is a big draw. Do the active things you love and the fitness will come naturally.
 
 

 

 

Health Tip of the Week

Smooth Start – November 2, 2009

Take time to eat a good, well-rounded breakfast. A meal that includes carbs, some protein and a little fat will keep your blood sugar stable and your appetite from running away with you at lunch. Make a smoothie using fresh or frozen fruits and juices, a half-cup of plain low-fat yogurt and a scoop of plain protein powder. Add a piece of whole-grain toast lightly covered with your favorite nut butter and you’ll be ready to face the world!

 

Health Tip of the Week

Brains Need Exercise, Too - October 26, 2009

If you want to stay mentally sharp and capable as time goes by, give your mind a little challenge every day. For maximum agility and strength, do some mental “cross-training.” Mix it up. One day, do a crossword. The next day, balance your checkbook without a calculator. Other mental pushups: Memorize a favorite poem, draw a map of the neighborhood you grew up in, shop without looking at your grocery list.

 

Health Tip of the Week

Walk This Way – October 19, 2009

In 1900, the average adult walked seven miles (or two-and-a-half hours) per day. Fast forward to 2009, and try to remember the last time you walked for two-plus hours.

Pick up the pace with four daily 15-minute walks one early in the morning and one after each meal at a moderate pace. Mall walking or shopping does count, as long as you continue at a regular pace.

 

Health Tip of the Week

Five-Minute Stress Buster - October 12, 2009

 

Does the idea of finding a half-hour a day to meditate make you even more tense? Try getting your bliss in five-minute increments instead.

 

Set your computer, cell phone, or watch alarm and take two or three short meditation or visualization breaks a day. Polish your self-soothing skills with a full-length class or videotape on the weekend or when you do have the time.

 

The first rule of stress-reduction: don’t stress over it!

 

Health Tip of the Week

Take a multivitamin that contains B vitamins – November 30, 2009

Take a multivitamin that contains B vitamins. The B vitamins folic acid, B6 and B12 are related to cognitive function.

If you swallow your vitamin supplements with your morning coffee, you may be missing out on possible health benefits. Take them with food for the best results. Vitamins A, D, E and K are fat-soluble, requiring the presence of some fat (think good fats, such as the omega-3’s found in flax seed) in the gastrointestinal tract for optimal absorption.

 

Carpal Tunnel Syndrome

Carpal Tunnel Syndrome

Bodywork Treatment Proves Successful

By Cathy Ulrich

 

It started as a vague feeling of numbness in her thumb and first two fingers, then progressed slowly to a definite tingling that woke her several nights a week. “It’s not so bad on weekends when I have a chance to rest my arms, but it’s now getting in the way of things I like to do at home,” says Marie, who spends long hours during the work-week typing at her computer keyboard. “I love to knit and cook, and I’ve had to curb these activities, as well. “Diagnosed with carpal tunnel syndrome, Marie displayed the classic symptoms: soreness in her forearms, pain in her hands at the end of a long day at the computer, and a feeling of tightness that had spread from hands and wrists all the way to her elbows. And recently, she’d been getting headaches.

Marie has a couple of different options for treating the problem. “My doctor tells me he can operate, but the surgery isn’t always successful,” she says. “He recommends I try bodywork first.”

Because Marie does the same motion in the same way many times a day over a long period of time, she has literally worn out the tissues involved in that motion. This type of injury — called a repetitive strain injury, or RSI — creates tiny tears in the fibers of the soft tissues of the body. While they don’t immediately cause loss of function, these micro-tears set up conditions for chronic inflammation that will eventually manifest as pain, soreness, tightness, tingling, and burning.

CTS

The hand and wrist combination work together as an amazing, mechanical anatomical wonder. Imagine a set of ropes and pulleys that travel from the elbow through the wrist to the fingertips. The muscles reside in the forearm, moving the fingers via long tendons that run through channels in the wrist. The nerves that send and receive sensory and motor information from the brain run alongside the tendons through these same channels. When bending or straightening a finger, these tendons slide back and forth, just like cables. When continually working at a keyboard and using the same motion in the same position thousands of times a day — like millions of Americans do — the cables begin to wear. And just like threads in a rope, some of the collagen fibers will tear. This process progresses until enough fibers are torn that the body develops inflammation in the tendons and sheaths. Swelling ensues, which pinches the nerves, producing the classic symptoms of tingling, swelling, and even loss of grip strength.

 

The Bigger Picture

The symptoms of carpal tunnel syndrome may reveal an even bigger problem. The nerves that carry sensory and motor information to the hand arise from the spinal cord in the neck, travel under the collarbone, through the armpit and elbow, all the way to the wrist. A nerve can become entrapped at the neck, shoulder, elbow, or wrist, and an impingement in any of these places can have a cumulative effect on the tingling felt in the hands. These entrapments are usually caused by poor postural habits. The soft tissues become shortened around habitual positions of rounded shoulders and forward head from working long hours at the computer and the channels where the nerves travel through the shoulders and arms can close down. Sound familiar? 

Can Bodywork Help?  

A recent study conducted at The Touch Research Institute at the University of Miami School of Medicine looked at the efficacy of bodywork in treating carpal tunnel syndrome. Researchers found that after the completion of four massage sessions, the participants experienced an improvement in grip strength and a decrease in pain, anxiety, and depression. Participants also showed improvement in specific medical tests used to diagnose carpal tunnel syndrome. This landmark study verifies what bodyworkers have observed clinically for years: Massage — and especially deep tissue techniques, such as Thai massage,  — can reorganize the connective tissue fibers, break up scar tissue, and reduce or eliminate the cause of inflammation. Soft tissue work helps realign these tiny fibers of the tendons and sheaths, and the body can then heal itself — and ease or even eliminate carpal tunnel syndrome.

Bodywork to the entire arm, shoulder, and neck will also free soft tissues where hidden tightness can contribute to the problem. Soft tissue inflammation can travel through the continuous connective tissue framework from fingertips to head and even cause headaches — as was the case with Marie. Massage can restore these tissues to normal function.

Other Considerations
In addition to bodywork, it’s important to evaluate postural habits, work station positioning, and movement patterns. When workers become so focused on their work that they forget their bodies, they tend to maintain positions that contribute to the cause. It’s important to identify several ways and several positions to accomplish the same thing. Moving the mouse from one side to the other, even during the same day, can help prevent fatigue and tissue failure. Wrist rests and keyboard trays are important, and a regular stretching routine is essential.

Finally, along with exercise and good nutrition, include bodywork as part of your regular health maintenance program. Regular massage reduces connective tissue inflammation and prevents scar tissue from forming. Movement education, such as the Alexander Technique, Feldenkrais Method, structural integration, and Trager Approach can help correct postural issues that also contribute to the problem. Bodywork is a treatment of choice to keep carpal tunnel syndrome from slowing you down.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Health Tip of the Week

The Office Yogi – April 6, 2009

 

You don’t need a studio to practice yoga!

 

To keep the chi flowing at your desk, simply sit with the sternum lifted and the abdomen muscles engaged. Clasp your hands behind your back (beginners can grasp fingers or wrists, while advanced can put palms together), and straighten your arms behind your back while simultaneously lifting your sternum and taking 10 exhalations. Expand the stretch into the lower back by maintaining the position above, moving your chair back from your desk and bending forward while lifting your arms over your head.  Hold the position while exhaling 10 times.