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April 21, 2010

How to Stay Healthy During Cold/Flu Season

By Dr. Stacey

Seven Simple Steps to Vibrant Health:

  1. Get enough rest. If your body is overly fatigued, it is harder to fight off infections such as the flu (or any other bacteria or virus for that matter). Your body does most of its healing while you sleep.
  2. Good nutrition is vital. Avoid sugar and caffeine (they weaken you immune system); eat whole, preferably organic foods. Enjoy fresh, raw garlic regularly – garlic is antibacterial, antiviral, and antifungal. Lab tests have found garlic to be more effective than antibiotics against certain types of bacteria.
  3. Exercise! Regular moderate exercise helps to boost immune system function (as well as the cardiovascular benefits and muscle conditioning).
  4. Stay hydrated. Pure, clean water is necessary for every bodily function. When you are dehydrated, your body functions less efficiently and that can cause fatigue, dry skin, headaches, stomachaches and constipation. If you wait until you are thirsty to drink, it is already too late – you are dehydrated!
  5. Use good hygiene. Washing your hands regularly decreases your likelihood of spreading a virus to your nose, mouth or to others. Antibacterial soaps should be avoided as they produce drug resistant “superbugs.” Sneeze or cough into your elbow, not your hands as viruses cannot survive long outside of the body and you reduce the potential for spread.
  6. Decrease stress. Adopt a more positive attitude. Optimists have healthier immune systems, suffer from fewer infections and are not as adversely by stressful life events.
  7.  Get adjusted! Keep your body subluxation free so your nervous system stays healthy. The immune system protects us from the flu, as well as any other infectious disease by directing your immune system and strives to get us well again when we do get ill. Remember, the immune system, like every other system in the body, is controlled by the nervous system. It’s about living your life to its fullest potential!

Thank you for your commitment to health. We are here to help with that commitment and are dedicated to the expression of your highest health potential. This information is posted to help you maximize that health potential. If you have any questions or need more information, please do not hesitate to ask. Thank you for sharing this with others; we appreciate your help in making this world a healthier place!

April 20, 2010

Chiropractic Whiteboard Thought of the Week 04-19-2010

By Dr. Stacey

When we correct the cause of the problem, you become more relaxed as your spine comes into alignment and you become more flexible.

Sarah A. says: “I am not living my life in blinding pain. Now I can focus on health improvement and becoming fit. I have less pain, more energy, better movement and greater flexibility.”

April 15, 2010

To Your Health Newsletter 04-14-2010

By Dr. Stacey

Brought to you by Gibsons Chiropractic

Feel the Runner’s High

Running is one of the best forms of aerobic conditioning for your heart and lungs. It can significantly increase your metabolic rate and the amount of calories you burn, leading to loss of excess body fat. Running is also beneficial for slowing down the aging process. Those who run regularly are less likely to experience bone and muscle loss due to the body’s positive response to additional physical demands.

Running can also have many psychological benefits. Most runners typically report being happier and feeling less stressed from the grind of daily life. Why? Because regular exercise has the ability to alter mood, attributable to a surge in hormones called endorphins. These hormones create a sense of euphoria often referred to as a “runner’s high” and can result in an improvement in mood.

Here are some great tips, courtesy of running coach Chipper Robinson from Running on the Edge in Ramsey, N.J., on how to maximize your running experience:

Incorporate cross training into your running routines. Add weight-lifting, bicycling, yoga, elliptical training, or swimming. Why? They make you fitter and less prone to injury.
Exercise your abdominal muscles almost every day. A strong midsection (core) is a key component to running. In fact, it can often be the single most important factor for success in long-distance running.
Change your intensity levels by running faster or farther. Alternate which one you choose to implement in various workouts. It prevents your body from adapting to routines.
Pay attention to your shoes. Most shoes wear out after 300 to 500 miles. You often can’t see the wear, but, your knees, hips, and back will feel it. Visit a running specialty store for quality shoes and talk to your doctor for suggestions on the best shoes to get. Not just any shoe will do.
Run on different surfaces. See how many different surfaces you can run on in a month: asphalt, gravel, trail, grass, track, treadmill, and beach. Each stresses your leg muscles in a slightly different way, helping to prevent overuse injuries. (If possible, avoid concrete, the hardest and most harmful surface for runners.)
Keep a training journal. A journal can be a great way to maintain motivation and consistency. Keep it filled with running times, routines, motivational quotes, and how your body reacts to various routines. You should have a documented road map for reaching your running goals.
Take some time off. You don’t have to run every day, every week, or even every month (as long as you’re performing other cardiovascular activities). For healthy, consistent training, your body needs regular recovery periods. Performance suffers with too much exercise. Start slow and work your way toward higher mileages and/or more frequency.
Introduce high-intensity interval training into your running routine. Alternate, pace, speed, tempo and rest periods during a single running session. For example, keep a steady pace for a mile and then sprint run for 30 seconds. Do this for several cycles and notice how your heart rate and muscle fatigue threshold increase.

Every great journey starts with a single step; now just put one foot in front of the other to see how far this new journey takes you. Welcome to the wonderful world of running. Talk to your doctor to learn more about the benefits of running.

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Nutrition for Healthy Skin

Along with hair and nails, skin is the fastest growing and most superficial tissue in the body. As such, it has a high demand for nutrients in order to continuously replenish itself with rapidly developing immature skin cells from the layers below. Even a marginal deficiency of nutrients such as vitamin A, the carotenoids, vitamin D, vitamins B1 and B2, niacin, pantothenic acid, biotin, folic acid, vitamin B12, vitamin E, vitamin C or essential fatty acids can result in impaired development of skin cells, resulting in skin that is less smooth, prone to lesions, less elastic and more likely to suffer accelerated aging.

Here are some of the more common skin problems and the nutritional supplements that can help you get rid of them:

For sun- and chemical-induced free-radical damage that causes premature aging of the skin, wrinkling, cancerous conditions, other forms of skin damage, the appropriate supplement contains optimal levels of antioxidants to help protect your skin from the aging and damaging effects caused by the sun: Antioxidants vitamin C, vitamin E, beta-carotene, selenium and zinc intercept and neutralize free radicals and defend skin cells from these damaging effects. Antioxidants also protect skin from ultraviolet light damage.

For skin disorders such as dermatitis (skin inflammation problems), lack of smoothness, seborrhoea-like scaly lesions, irregular pigmentation, the appropriate supplement contains B vitamins at sufficient doses to ensure the healthy development of skin cells: B-vitamin supplementation corrects these skin problems and successfully treats a wide range of dermatitis problems. B vitamins also help to improve the smoothness and texture of the skin.

For unhealthy skin, acne and other conditions, the appropriate supplement provides adequate daily doses of zinc and selenium to enhance your skin’s vitality and appearance: Zinc improves oil gland function, local skin hormone activation, wound healing, inflammation control within the skin and tissue regeneration of skin cells. Selenium plays a key role in antioxidant protection and in the prevention and management of various skin conditions.

Healthy skin is an important step toward a healthy, happy you, so what are you waiting for? Ask your doctor about how to give yourself an “inner facial” with the right nutrition.

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Three Steps to a Happier You

They say happiness is a state of mind, not a reflection of your circumstances, but we all know one can have a dramatic effect on the other. Here are three simple suggestions that can put a smile on your face and maximize your health and wellness while doing so:

1. Challenge Yourself: If you’re stuck in the daily grind, wondering why every day seems to be “same old, same old,” maybe it’s because it is. Fortunately, you have the power. Whether it’s changing up your workout routine, learning a new language, or finding creative ways to teach your kids new things, commit to continually challenging yourself and avoid stagnation.
2. Turn Bad Into Good: We all experience good and bad moments in life, but whether you crumble or climb is really just a matter of attitude. Negative breeds negative, which can have profound consequences. Next time you’re hit with a negative, think about the up side (there always is one, even if it’s not immediate) and turn that frown upside down. Before you know it, you’ll be back on track.
3. Find Time to Relax: Life isn’t a race, it’s a journey filled with memorable moments; make sure you appreciate them, rather than rushing from one day to the next. It’s all-too-easy to get caught up in daily routines and lose yourself. Schedule some you time every day, whether it’s a sunset walk, a long bath, a good book, or even a nap – find time to relax and reap the physical and psychological benefits.

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April 5, 2010

Trauma, Thoughts, and Toxins = Vertebral Subluxations Part 3: Chemical Stress

By Dr. Stacey
pills, prescription drugs

Prescription Drugs

In Part 1 and Part 2, we covered the five components of a vertebral subluxation as described by B.J. Palmer in 1934. They are:

1.) Malposition – This simply means misalignment of a vertebra
2.) Occlusion – This refers to the closing off of an opening that a nerve passes through. In our case, we are referring to the neural canal where the spinal cord travels down.
3.) Pressure – When C1 or C2 is misaligned, this can occlude the neural canal near the brain stem. This can cause pressure or tension on the spinal cord at this level.
4.) Interference to flow of nervous system transmission – With a misalignment, an occlusion, and pressure, there is zero chance for the nervous system to properly communicate to the rest of the body.
5.) Three-directional torqued vertebra – To achieve these four components of vertebral subluxation, the C1 and C2 vertebrae has to shift up or down, left or right, and rotated front or back.

We also covered physical and emotional stress and their contribution to vertebral subluxations. Let’s move onto the third and final cause.

Toxins aka Chemical Stress

Toxins are around us at every corner. They are in the air we breathe, the water we drink, the food we eat, in our medicine cabinets, our bodies… you name it, and toxins are there.

So how do we avoid toxins?

First off, let’s make one thing perfectly clear. We will never be able to avoid all toxins. Life happens and so do toxins. You might as well forget about taking control of every single thing that enters your body right now.

There will be days that no matter how much fresh organic juice you make in your Jack LaLanne juicer, no matter how many miles you run, no matter how long you meditate, you still might walk through a cigarette smoker’s exhaled, yet lingering nicotinic cloud, or breathe in fumes from some old clunker’s exhaust, or shower in city water full of prescription drug remnants and fluoride.

That being said, you can actually control a number of toxins from entering your body. Let’s begin with the most toxic.

Prescription Drugs

In 1992, the average American got an average of seven prescriptions per year. In 2008? That number went up to 12. This is a 71% increase, which amounts to an extra $180 billion in sales for pharmaceutical companies.

Being on 12 prescription drugs is not health. In fact, that is completely toxic to your health, and any MD who says differently is giving unethical advice and should be jailed. Health does not come from a pill or a bottle. It is an outside-in approach, a way of treating the effect, that will never produce the desired effect… which is a healthy lifestyle.

I don’t care how skillfully that guy in the Cialis commercial can throw a football through a tire, Cialis is not good for you. It doesn’t matter how good of a time those four old guys are having on their vacation, cholesterol lowering medications are a cover-up in dealing with the real issue: a disfunctioning liver due to terrible diet and lifestyle decisions.

prozac

Prozac Poster

Let’s take a look at the popular drug fluoxetine, more commonly known as Prozac. This drug is commonly used for major depression (including pediatric depression), obsessive-compulsive disorder (in both adult and pediatric populations), bulimia nervosa, panic disorder and premenstrual dysphoric disorder.

Prozac is a selective serotonin re-uptake inhibitor (SSRI), and the fourth of its kind when Ely Lilly released it to the public. When the first two SSRIs on the market were withdrawn due to side effects, Eli Lilly went on a fierce marketing campaign to make sure fluoxatine was looked at as a major scientific breakthrough in popular culture. Also, they made it appear as if fluoxetine was the first SSRI to be introduced to the market, when it was not.

Below is a list of side effects associated with Prozac, not often realized because of its acceptance in our society:

Drowsiness, Chronic Trouble Sleeping, Excessive Sweating, Head Pain, Feel Like Throwing Up, Diarrhea, Nervous, Feeling Weak, Anxious, Itching, Joint Pain, Muscle Pain, Fever, Chills, Rash, Trouble Breathing, Nightmares, Feeling Restless, Problems with Eyesight, Ringing in the Ears, Abnormal Heart Rhythm, Stuffy Nose, Dry Mouth, Incomplete or Infrequent Bowel Movements, Inability to have an Erection, Painful Periods, Sun-Sensitive Skin, Hair Loss, Dizzy, Low Energy, Involuntary Quivering, Taste Problems, Temporary Redness of Face and Neck, Loss of Appetite, Weight Loss, Increased Hunger, Fast Heartbeat, Cough, Chest Pain, Throwing Up, Gas, Frequent Urination, Stomach Cramps, Numbness and Tingling, Confused, Sexual Problems, Altered Interest in Having Sexual Intercourse, Neuroleptic Malignant Syndrome, Serotonin Syndrome – Adverse Drug Interaction, Hepatitis caused by Drugs, Inflammation of Skin caused by an Allergy, Erythema Multiforme, Seizures, Swollen Lymph Nodes, Abnormal Liver Function Tests, Reaction due to an Allergy, Allergic Reaction causing Serum Sickness, Low Blood Sugar, Low Amount of Sodium in the Blood, Increased Risk of Bleeding, Behaving with Excessive Cheerfulness and Activity, Mild Degree of Mania, Having Thoughts of Suicide, Loss of Memory, Flu-Like Symptoms, Weight Gain, and Mood Changes.

Altered interest in having sexual intercourse? Hepatitis caused by drugs? No thank you.

To be fair, most of these side effects are rare. But if someone were to take this drug for 15-20 years, I suspect the rare side effects become everyday business as usual.

Is it any wonder that Ely Lilly needed to embark on a fierce marketing campaign to con the public into believing in this worthless and dangerous drug?

Food and Drink

Along with prescription drugs, this subject could take up multiple blog posts for weeks. Food in our society is not what it once was. In fact, most food we eat is not really food. Look no further than the aisles at your local grocery store. Packaged goods with ingredient lists full of words understood only by hardcore chemists line the shelves at every corner.

Ingredients like monosodium glutamate (MSG), phenylketonuronics aka phenalalanine aka aspartame, L-cysteine, high fructose corn syrup, red #40, and yellow #5 frequent all sorts of packaged goods such as Hamburger Helper, diet sodas, whole wheat bread, frozen microwaveable dinners, most cereals, and more. These things do not occur in nature.

For example, MSG was originally derived from seaweed as a salty additive to foods. But now, it is mass-manufactured by the tons through an industrialized fermentation process of starch, sugar beets, sugar cane, or molasses. MSG is the single salt form of glutamate, an amino acid found in protein rich foods, as well as in your body. It is an excitotoxic substance that can raise your blood glutamate levels up to 20 times the normal limit. It might also be responsible for making cancer cells more mobile and contributing to or even causing cardiac arrythmias, among other things.

But here’s the sneaky part: MSG can be in your food under different guises. The manufacturers of this chemical know the negative public perception of the three letters M-S-G, so they were able to get laws passed that allowed them to disguise MSG as yeast extract, hydrolyzed vegetable protein, and textured protein, to name a few.

But even if you avoid the aisles in the grocery stores, the produce can be just as bad. Pesticides are used generously on fruits and vegetables grown around the world. While we all grow up learning to wash our produce before eating it, you can’t wash off or wash out all the pesticides.

pesticides, organic produce

Airplane spraying pesticide on crops

There is something called the dirty dozen in regards to produce. This is referring to foods containing the highest amount of pesticides. They are, from most to least: peaches, apples, bell peppers, celery, nectarines, strawberries, cherries, kale, lettuce, grapes (from outside the United States), carrots, and pears. These are not the only foods containing pesticides, just the foods with the most. All conventional produce will contain pesticides to some degree.

Then, we get into the subject of genetically engineered food. Again, this could be more blog posts in and of itself. I will simply refer you to the movie Food, Inc. It is a little bit like in the movie the Matrix, when Morpheus offers Neo the choice between the red pill (the truth) and the blue pill (return to the status quo). Food, Inc is akin to taking the red pill (thanks to Dr. Scott Brady for that metaphor).

Avoiding the Chemicals

As I said earlier, we can’t always avoid everything around us. Many of us live in cities with high rates of pollution, or our homes may have hidden mold that we don’t know about (common in Texas). What we can do is avoid the things we do have control over.

Prescription drugs, unless ABSOLUTELY necessary, are not necessary. Not the purple pill or the green pill or the yellow pill. Not one pill or seven pills or twelve pills. I might sound a little like Dr. Seuss, but I am serious. God doesn’t make defective junk that only pharmaceuticals can cure. In fact, the word pharmaceutical itself is derived from words meaning something along the lines of witchcraft. Not very scientific if you ask me.

When in the grocery store, avoid the aisles and buy organic produce if possible. Jack LaLanne has a saying that goes something like this: “If man made it, don’t eat it.” Grocery store aisles are filled with man-made food and you’re better off staying out of them. Organic has become somewhat of a hip and cool pop culture term, but still your best bet when it comes to pesticide free food.

Next week, I’ll conclude this series with a list of things you can do to minimize or avoid physical, emotional, and chemical stress.

[by Dr. Brandon Harshe on April 1, 2010 from http://theatlasoflife.com/2010/04/01/trauma-thoughts-and-toxins-vertebral-subluxations-part-3-chemical-stress/]

March 31, 2010

To Your Health Newsletter 03-31-2010

By Dr. Stacey

Brought to you by Gibsons Chiropractic

Control Your Allergy Symptoms Naturally

When looking to control allergy symptoms without resorting to medications, the first step is to limit your exposure. Using an air filter, preferably one that ties into a central heating and air conditioning system, can drastically reduce the build-up of allergens in your home. It is also important to focus on areas where allergens can collect. Pet areas, carpets, rugs, and upholstered furniture should be cleansed regularly, and bedding should be washed at least once a week.

In addition to these simple steps, you may want to look to your diet as a means for controlling your allergy symptoms. A study of 35 patients conducted in the Journal of Asthma found a positive correlation between allergy relief and vegetarian or vegan diets. In a clinical observation, 92 percent of patients who followed a vegan diet for one year reported reduction in asthma symptoms.

Foods that have been closely linked to respiratory allergies include dairy products, chocolate, sugar, and gluten. There is also strong evidence indicating a connection between allergic rhinitis and intake of certain food additives, including artificial dyes and colorants, sulfites, and benzoates.

Omega-3 fatty acids have also been shown to support healthy airways and additionally favor the production of anti-inflammatory mediators. In a 2009 study reported in the International Archives of Allergy and Immunology, atopic asthma patients supplemented daily with omega-3 fatty acids improved airway responsiveness even when subjects were exposed to a known allergen. Dietary sources of omega-3 fatty acids include cold-water fish, flax seeds, chia seeds, and walnuts.

Increasing antioxidant intake is also essential to prevent the free radicals that are often elevated in allergies and asthma. Vitamin C is considered as one of the most important dietary antioxidants for the protection of the lungs, and low levels of blood vitamin C are considered an independent risk factor for allergic rhinitis. Other beneficial antioxidants may include vitamin E, selenium, the carotenoids, and the flavonoids, which all posses powerful free radical- quenching capabilities.

Why go through life suffering from allergies if you don’t have to? With a few dietary and lifestyle changes, you can face allergy season without stockpiling allergy medications and Kleenex. Talk to your doctor for more information about allergies and natural solutions.

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Show Me the Light: The Healing Power of Laser Therapy

An increasing number of doctors nationwide are offering laser therapy to their patients. With its increasing popularity and use, that means more and more people are probably wondering about lasers in general and some important specifics, including how they work, how safe they are and what it feels like to get treated. Here’s a little Q & A on laser therapy.

Q: What is laser therapy?
A: Laser therapy is the application of low levels of laser light to areas of the body that have been injured or damaged. Contrasted with high-powered lasers used in health care that cut tissue, such as surgical or hair-removal lasers, therapy lasers produce beneficial photochemical and photobiological interactions that can help relieve pain and repair injured/damaged tissue.

Q: How does laser therapy work?
A: The photons of laser light penetrate through your skin and are absorbed by special components in your body’s cells called chromophores. Just as photosynthesis creates energy for plants, the absorption of the photons by your cells causes increased production of cellular energy. In areas of injury or damage, this means there is more energy available to improve the rate and quality of healing.

Q: What does it feel like to get a treatment?
A: With very low-powered therapy lasers, you feel nothing at all. Higher-powered (Class IV) therapy lasers produce a mild, soothing, warm feeling. You may notice a tingling sensation in the treatment area as blood vessels dilate, or that muscle spasms are reducing in strength and duration. Laser therapy is a painless treatment.

Q: How do you know it not causing cancer or other tissue damage?
A: There are two ways that laser light can damage tissue; if it is very concentrated (high power density) or if the photons are very high energy. Therapy lasers use power densities that are far below the levels that cause tissue damage. Ultraviolet light has very high-energy photons capable of ionizing molecules, but therapy lasers use visible and near-infrared light, which only cause molecular vibrations. You could argue that therapy laser light is safer than sunlight.

Q: How can I get more information?
A: Ask your doctor! A steadily growing number of health care practitioners are offering laser therapy to their patients. Your doctor can determine if laser therapy is appropriate for your particular health situation.

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Four Ways to Keep Kids Moving

1. Lead by Example. When it comes to exercise, an adult couch potato effectively nurtures a child couch potato, who then becomes yet another adult couch potato years down the road – a vicious cycle of inactivity that increases disease risk. Fortunately, the opposite is also true, so get off the couch and show your kids the value of an active life filled with physical activity.

2. Unplug for Awhile. Hours on end of TV, video games, and even phone and computer “activities” like instant messaging, chat rooms and other pursuits leave very little time for exercise. While there’s no easy solution, establishing a daily time limit on these activities is a great start.

3. Find the Time. When we’re young, we spend hours in the yard or on school grounds playing our favorite games; then we slowly get more and more responsibilities and somehow, the time just seems to disappear. It happens quickly, right around the time daily homework comes along. What can you do about it? It’s the same advice, whether young or old: Find the time. Pencil physical activity into your child’s daily schedule and don’t let “life” ever erase it.

4. Make It Fun. Too often, exercise becomes more of a chore than a pleasing activity, and this often begins at an early age, basically as soon as children get involved in the rigors of organized sports. Sure, it’s never all fun and games, but exercise shouldn’t be a dreaded activity, not if you do it right. Be creative and teach children that active is fun at any age.

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January 15, 2010

Just Try Walking!

By Dr. Stacey

While some fitness enthusiasts relentlessly seek out the latest, trendiest exercise crazes, many others are returning to good, old-fashioned walking to help them feel great and get into shape! Whether enjoying the wonder of nature, the company of a friend or your baby, walking can be a healthy, invigorating experience. And thanks to its convenience and simplicity, walking just might be right for you too!

Benefits

You don’t need to become a member of an expensive gym to go walking. And except for a good pair of walking shoes, it requires virtually no equipment.

A sedentary lifestyle has debilitating influence on people’s health as they age. Exercise is imperative or as the old saying goes: “if you don’t use it, you lose it!” Walking accomplishes all of the following and more:

  • Improves cardiovascular endurance
  • Tones muscles of the lower body
  • Burns calories:  about 80 if walking 2 miles per hour, and about 107 if walking 4 1/2 miles per hour
  • Reduces risk of heart disease

Shoes

The first item of business when beginning your walking program is to select the right pair of shoes. I recommend the following tips: Make sure the shoes you purchase fit properly. The balls of your feet should rest exactly at the point where the toe end of the shoe bends during walking. Avoid high-top shoes that often cover the entire ankle, limiting your foot’s ability to move freely and naturally. Opt instead for shoes that offer your ankle a fuller range of motion. Select shoes with plenty of cushioning in the soles to absorb the impact of your walking. If you suffer from excessive pronation, fallen arches or other biomechanical problems with your feet, consider getting custom-made orthotic supports.

Getting Started

Walking just 12 minutes every other day can offer important health benefits. Walking 20 minutes every other day is even better. In order to increase your longevity, try to eventually work up to 30 minutes, five days per week. The following tips should help you get started safely and smoothly:

  • Move your arms freely, in coordination with the opposite leg.
  • Don’t stoop your head or look down as you walk. This will challenge the normal forward curve of your neck, which, in turn, will cause you to carry your weight improperly.
  • Don’t carry weights or dumbbells while walking. They’re better used as a separate part of your exercise regimen. If you do carry weights while walking, be sure that they are light enough that they do not interfere with the “rhythm” of your arms and legs; in order to counterbalance the body, when your right arm moves forward, the left leg should be moving forward, etc.
  • Expect a little soreness in the thighs and calves for the first week or two. If you experience more than minor soreness, check with your Doctor of Chiropractic.
  • Walk briskly, with “purpose.” Simply “sauntering,” while relaxing and enjoyable, is not an effective form of cardiovascular exercise.

Keep in mind that, if you have not previously been physically active, you should consult your doctor before beginning a new exercise program. Begin slowly with a walk of perhaps half of a mile at a pace that does not cause discomfort. Continue this for about two weeks, then start to increase the pace and length of time walking. Eventually – depending on your age – you can build your “target” heart rate/pulse to either 120 beats per minute or, if younger, as many as 140 beats per minute. For the average adult, a heart rate of 120 beats per minute would require walking at about 2 miles per hour, while a heart rate of 140 beats per minute would require a pace of 4 ½ miles per hour.

Surfaces

Some walking surfaces are better than others on your musculoskeletal system. Walking on a cushioned or rubberized track is ideal, because the cushioning of this type of track absorbs most of the impact of your walking. Many recreation centers offer this type of track free of charge.

Grass is another good surface, but watch out for hidden dips or holes in the ground. Walking on a surface with no give, such as concrete or a mall floor, is not your best choice, because this type of surface will not absorb much of the impact your body will experience. If you do choose to walk on such a surface, be extra careful to select highly cushioned shoes.

Strollers

Strollers are great for giving your back a break from carrying your little one – when you use them properly. As you walk behind the stroller, your elbows should be slightly bent, back straight. Imagine a fishing line pulling you up from your sternal notch (the bump on the upper part of your breastbone). This will make your chest come up and your shoulders come down with your chin tucked in. Ideally, your stroller should have adjustable handles so that you, your spouse and other caregivers can easily raise or lower the handles to waist level – the optimal position for ergonomic ease. In case you’ve inherited a stroller with fixed handles that are too low for your comfort, check your favourite baby supply store for handle extenders.

Now that you’ve nailed the stroller walk, don’t blow it by bending over to transfer baby in and out. Instead of hunching your back, kneel on one knee to get down to baby’s level, and then straighten your legs to stand up. When you need to free up your arms, front carriers or slings come in handy. As with everything else, just be sure not to overdo as this can cause neck and shoulder strain.

Hydration

Drink 8-10 eight-ounce glasses of water a day to help keep the kidneys active, dilute and remove toxins from the body, and replace lost fluids. (Coffee, tea, soft drinks and alcohol are diuretics (dehydrators) – don’t substitute them for water). If you perspire during walking, you may need to drink even more.

Pain and Injury

While you may experience pain or injury in a particular area, such as a knee or a hip, the root of the problem may lie somewhere else. Injuries of this nature are not regional, or isolated, but often systemic. A problem in the foot or ankle can create an imbalance in every step, leading to discomfort or injury that moves to the knees, hips, low back, or elsewhere. If you suffer from pain beyond typical muscle soreness, your Doctor of Chiropractic can diagnose and treat your pain or injury and get you back into the swing of your walking routine.

Your Doctor of Chiropractic can also help customize a wellness program that is right for you and has the expertise to help keep you in the mainstream of life.

January 2, 2010

Happy New Year!

By Dr. Stacey

Happy New Year!

I hope this note finds you all doing well as we begin the New Year. Everyone always makes resolutions for the New Year but few people actually accomplish them…do you know why?

Many fail at their resolutions because they do not know how to take their resolutions and turn them into reality…but we do and we want to help you start the New Year healthy.

The necessary ingredients are:

  1. To complete what you may have started in 2009.
  2. To have a clear goal in mind for your health in 2010…what would you like your health to look like by this time next year? Make your goal specific and measurable.
  3. What have you done and what will you need to do to accomplish these health objectives?
  4. What will motivate you to take action and keep going this coming year?
  5. Do you know where to find the necessary resources to grow your health?
  6. Do you have and will you follow a plan of action or will your health just be the result of luck in 2010?

How did you do? That is an indicator of how you will do in 2010. What will your life look like in six months if you firmly commit today towards a healthier, happier and more productive tomorrow? It’s yours for the taking! Commit 100% to YOU! You are worth it!

Okay, we said we would help so here goes…

Although your health is YOUR responsibility, we are here to be your health coach and part of your team. We are here to help and watch you grow. We are with you every step of the way and we are committed to putting forth the same amount of effort that you exhibit.

  1. We have amazing chiropractic care.
  2. We have an infrared sauna and full spectrum light therapy to help you detoxify your body and stimulate healing (See www.gibsonschiropractic.com/light-therapy.html for more information).
  3. We have counselling, hypnotherapy, self regulating therapy, massage therapy, acupuncture and homeopathy (see www.gibsonshealthandwellness.com/practitioners.html for more details).
  4. We offer a lending library, monthly printed newsletters, as well as health articles posted online on www.gibsonschiropractic.com/blog and on our Facebook page:
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 Gibsons Chiropractic, Health and Wellness Centre

Wow! Can you believe it? All of this and more under one roof and at your disposal!

Our wish for you this year is that all your dreams come true especially those of feeling, being and looking your best. Here at Gibsons Chiropractic and Gibsons Health and Wellness Centre® we will do everything within our means to make your life choices healthier and happier.

For the purpose of helping you achieve your ideal health and being at your best with chiropractic care, nutrition, exercise, right thinking and emphasis on improving activities of daily living, we are dedicated to bringing you the best possible outcomes.

Yours in health,

Dr. Stacey Rosenberg

December 27, 2009

What Should I Do About My Child’s Fever?

By Dr. Stacey

This is a question parents sometimes ask in our office, especially during flu season. In order to answer it, we need to be clear of both the dangers and benefits of a fever.

Many of you just did a double take when you read that fever can have a benefit. But, according to a 1992 brochure published by the makers of Tylenol, fever is a very important thing for your body to be able to produce. It helps the body prevent or clear infections, whether they are viral or bacterial.

This same publication states that fevers are generally not dangerous until they reach a temperature of 106.3 degrees Fahrenheit. In fact, it says that there is not really even much danger of a seizure from the fever until it has been at 106 degrees for 3 days or more. Furthermore, it states that, “even if a seizure does occur, there rarely is any residual effect at all.”

Now, this is not to say that we want to let a fever get to the point where a seizure or any damage could occur. Nor does it mean that we should not make sure something more serious isn’t going on. What it does mean is that we should be acutely aware that the body has a specific purpose for producing a fever, and we should respect that and not automatically try to reduce it. This is a very important thing to understand, and while many adults can now grasp this concept, many of our kids have grown up believing that fever is a bad thing and must be reduced as soon as it starts. *

We have an explanation for fever in our office that I would like to share with you here. It is the way we explain fever to a child, and it usually helps clear it up for adults as well. It goes something like this…

“Hi Johnny! Your mom told me you’re not feeling quite the way you would like to, and that you have a fever, is that right? Well, do you remember how we always tell you after your adjustment that your power is on now? You know Tim, that “power” is just like a light! Have you ever touched a light bulb when it’s been on? It’s very hot isn’t it? Well, sometimes, when your body needs a little more power to help itself get or stay healthy, it turns its power up, and you get hot…just like that light bulb! That’s what we call a fever, and it’s a very good thing for your body to be able to turn its power up if it needs to. My job is to adjust you and make sure that your power gets turned up as high as it needs to go to get you well again, but only as high as it needs to go and no higher! Your adjustment also helps to make sure that your power is only turned up for as long as it needs to be and no longer. Pretty cool, huh?! Isn’t it great how your body knows exactly what to do to stay healthy?! Come on, let’s get you adjusted and make sure your light can help your body be the best it can be!”

This kind of explanation from you can help your children understand the incredible miracle they have within them. It will also help them to grow up knowing that health does not come from drugs, but that it is our natural state. And, by keeping our spines aligned and functioning properly so that our brains and bodies are fully connected, we all have the best possible chance of staying healthy and moving toward the full expression of Life. This also means that we all are more likely to reach our potential in life. And after all, isn’t that what life is really all about anyway?

* Did you know that not automatically treating/reducing fever is a big reason why less patients died under chiropractic care than medical care during the 1913 Spanish Flu epidemic!?! 

[Adapted from an article by Dr. Kevin Donka www.kevindonka.com]

December 6, 2009

The Holidays

By Dr. Stacey
Even though Thanksgiving, Halloween, Christmas, and New Years make up a total of 4 days, most people just call November, December, and the first part of January the holidays.

Since it is the holidays, you can be irresponsible and careless. You eat can mass quantities, put all sorts of horrible “holiday” items in your body, stop exercising, miss adjustments, spend too much, and put important things off because, after all, it is the holidays. In total, you end up with a 6-10 week reign of terror on your life and body!

If you add to these two months to all of the other times you tend to abuse or ignore your health, such as parties, anniversaries, other holidays, birthdays, weddings, weekends, secretaries day, etc, you are basically being irresponsible for your health (and many other areas of your life) conservatively three months out of every year (25% of every year)!

By the time you are 40 years old, you will have spent 10 years doing serious, possibly irreparable damage to your body, your finances, and possibly your whole life. This is another reason why people are supposed to live to 100, but only make 75 (25% off)!

The holidays, are a time designated to celebrate and appreciate life’s blessings. However, they have become a time dedicated to shortening life and falling short of your potential. Clearly, it is time to look at the holidays from a new perspective.

Of the thousands of sick and suffering people I have met, examined, and consulted, not once have I heard one of them say, “I wish I had done less for my health all of these years.” 

New Holiday Rules:

Due to the extreme mental, physical and chemical stress brought on by the holidays, please ADD, do not subtract from your current adjustment and home spinal rehab schedule!

Others need care now more than ever, so do not stop referring! It is a time of year to think more about others – so refer more! You can click here for a coupon for a free computerized spinal check to give to friends and family.  

 

[Thanks to Dr. Ben Lerner of Maximized Living for the inspiration for this article.]

December 2, 2009

The Top 5 Things You Can Do To Be The Healthiest You’ve Ever Been! Part 2

By Dr. Stacey

Solutions (also known as “The Action Plan”):

This is part 2 of a two part posting. Click here for The Top 5 Things You Can Do To Be The Healthiest You’ve Ever Been! Part 1

1: Eat an anti-inflammatory diet:

AVOID:

  • Sugar
  • Grains (esp. wheat)
  • White foods (e.g. flour, salt, sugar)
  • Trans-fats
  • Fried foods
  • Soda pop/soft drinks
  • Chemicals & preservatives
EAT PLENTY OF:

  • Fruits
  • Vegetables
  • Nuts
  • Raw is best
  • Local and/or organic is best
EAT IN MODERATION:

  • Fish
  • Poultry
  • Eggs
  • Lean red meat
  • Dairy
  • Eat less food, more often (e.g. grazing frequently)

 Include these Top Eleven Superfoods in your diet as much as possible:

  • Guava
  • Gogi berries
  • Dried plums
  • Pomegranate juice
  • Cabbage
  • Beets
  • Swiss chard
  • Nettle Leaf
  • Purslane
  • Cinnamon

 2: Take these supplements:

a) Omega-3 fatty acids (potent anti-inflammatory effects)

  • From purified cod liver oil preferably (that way you get your vitamin A and D as well as the purification removes heavy metals like methyl mercury present in some fish).
  • Flax seed and borage oil are also good sources.

b) Probiotics (improves and maintain digestive and immune system health)

c) Anti-oxidants/phytonutrients (prevents damage from free radicals, has an anti-inflammatory effect, boosts immune health and more)

  • Especially vitamins C, D & E.

 3: Get physically fit:

Exercise – aerobic and resistance training is the only way to achieve fitness!

But not just any exercise, the ideal is combo fitness. An aerobic workout (such as running, walking briskly, swimming, water aerobics or biking) will increase your heart rate and lower body fat, but adding resistance training (such as weights, Pilates or yoga) will build lean muscle and improve insulin response by 40%. There is a synergistic benefit, and the two types of exercise combined are better than each one alone. Your skeletal muscle is the most insulin sensitive, so by improving lean muscle mass, you have more tissues to have that metabolic effect.

Fit people:

  • Burn fat not sugar (fat people burn sugar, not fat, as lean muscle metabolizes insulin better)
  • Have greatly reduced stress hormone levels
  • Have healthier hearts
  • Have more muscle/less fat
  • Look and feel younger and better
  • Live longer!

 4: Manage your stress:

  • Get regular chiropractic adjustments (more later)
  • Exercise! Exercise! Exercise!
  • Breathe
  • Meditation/quiet reflection/prayer
  • Get more sleep!
  • Manage your time better (consider a coach)
  • Talk about your stress with a friend/counsellor
  • Accept what you cannot change
  • Learn to say no!
  • Delegate
  • Massage
  • Take a vacation
  • Focus on living in the present
  • Avoid drugs, alcohol

 5: Keep your nervous system free of interference:

Your nervous system controls EVERYTHING! Your spine is constantly subject to stresses, traumas and injuries:

Traumatic birth, motor vehicle accidents, falls, lifting, twisting, bending, yard work, shoveling snow, moving furniture, repetitive strains, poor posture, allergies, chemical sensitivites, emotional stress, dehydration, tension etc.

Nerve interferences may cause symptoms and conditions such as:

  • Headaches
  • Head pain
  • TMJ syndrome
  • Hearing problems
  • Sinus pain
  • Allergies
  • Neck pain
  • Carpal tunnel syndrome
  • Shoulder pain
  • High blood pressure
  • Frequent colds or flu
  • Stomach problems
  • Other digestive problems
  • Kidney and bladder problems
  • Postural abnormalities
  • Low back or hip pain
  • Constipation
  • Erectile dysfunction
  • Menstrual problems
  • Certain types of infertility
  • Sciatica (leg pain)
  • Children’s problems such as: Asthma, Ear infections, Colic
  • Many other conditions…

In short, the health of your spine and nervous system is the most important factor in how healthy you can be! And the only way to assure a nervous system free of interference is with a nerve exam.

Click here to download a coupon for a free computerized spinal nerve check.

 

[This article was adapted from a PowerPoint and DVD presentation by Dr. Rosenberg, which was based on a presentation by Dr. Tom Klapp, courtesy of Assistants for Chiropractic Excellence by Kim Klapp]

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