therapy etiketine sahip kayıtlar gösteriliyor. Tüm kayıtları göster
therapy etiketine sahip kayıtlar gösteriliyor. Tüm kayıtları göster

7 Mayıs 2017 Pazar

Ice baths and snow meditation can cold therapy make you stronger?

Before Scott Carney set about climbing a Polish mountain in his underwear in temperatures 10 degrees below zero, he believed his days of adventure were just about over. He was in his mid-30s. An anthropologist by training and a journalist by vocation he had written two books about the dangerous extremes to which humans go to find salvation – the first about the black market in organ donation, the second about the fatal consequences of a particular meditation practice.


His journey to the Polish mountain – called Sněžka, 5,300ft, the pinnacle of the Silesian mountain range – had begun one afternoon at his computer in Long Beach, California, with palm trees swaying gently outside his window. He had been idly Googling when he came across a picture of a man in his 50s sitting cross-legged on a glacier in the Arctic Circle, unclothed.


The man was Wim Hof, a Dutch evangelist for an extreme physical method that he claimed allowed him to raise and lower his body temperature at will and to control his immune system with the power of his mind. Carney was intrigued, but also highly sceptical. He decided to investigate Hof’s claims, and persuaded Playboy magazine to sign him up for a week-long initiation into the Dutchman’s methods that took place in a shack in Silesia in January.


He assumed that the story would be about another guru with an eye to the main chance, another investigation into the ways in which the gullible can be parted from their money in the name of enlightenment (the week cost Carney and his fellow disciples $ 2,000 each).


His scepticism did not last long. By the end of the week, after a short course in the breathing techniques that Hof demonstrated, and controlled exposure to the winter elements and icy water, Carney felt transformed. Not only could he climb Sněžka in 2ft of snow, but he discovered a kind of elation – and an enormous sense of internal warmth. He was converted.



Carney with Wim Hof and a fellow disciple, all bare-chested, linking arm and with fists of defiance, near the summit of Kilimanjaro.


Frozen assets: (from left) Carney with Wim Hof and a fellow disciple near the summit of Kilimanjaro.

His latest book, What Doesn’t Kill Us, explores the science and the philosophy of Wim Hof’s methods, which promise to unleash dormant “inner fire” by creating the mitochondria-rich tissue – “brown fat” – that is produced when the body is exposed to extreme cold.


By the time Carney met him, Hof had achieved notoriety by running a barefoot marathon in the Arctic and climbing 25,000ft up Everest in his shorts. Carney went on not only to relish the Dutchman’s regime of ice swimming, but also to accompany him in a shirtless climb up Kilimanjaro. The “guru-buster” had been won over by a man who claimed that a few simple physical techniques can promote world peace and “win the war on bacteria”.


But Carney is enthusiastic rather than being easily won over when it comes to Hof’s more grandiose claims. The book is pretty exhaustive in its investigation and he provides anecdotal evidence for Hof’s belief that his regime can improve the lives of those with auto-immune conditions – such as Parkinson’s, Crohn’s disease and rheumatoid arthritis – and this comes with caveats. The biology of the method focuses on the potential of vasoconstriction – the narrowing of blood vessels in response to extreme cold. The philosophy behind it suggests that our bodies – and brains – require exposure to physical extremes to realise what they are capable of.


Speaking to me about his conversion, Carney explains his belief that we have “forgotten” how to access the powers Hof describes. “Our technology has advanced to such a degree that we no longer see ourselves as part of nature,” he says. “But we are just big smart monkeys, right? One of the driving forces in our technological progress has been to try to maximise comfort and convenience – and that has had consequences.”


Whether that progress is thermostatically controlled room temperature, a decent sofa, or easy navigation, the aim, Carney suggests, is to protect ourselves from things that are hard physically and mentally. Without those everyday challenges, he argues, we have undermined our natural biological armoury. The Hof method – which begins with hyperventilation and culminates in lots of ice – is designed to switch on and wake up inbuilt energies, and to trigger immune responses – those same responses that allowed our ancestors to trek across tundra and thrive in unheated caves.




It’s designed to trigger the immune responses that allowed our ancestors to thrive in unheated caves




The idea is seductive, but isn’t Carney wary about evangelising what are potentially dangerous practices? He claims there is some evidence to support Hof’s theory, although it’s not conclusive or wholly supported by science. “There is always the risk that people take these things to extremes,” he says. “Certainly one of my worries about writing this book is that someone might read it and think: ‘Oh my God, I can be immune to the elements!’ and then die on a mountaintop. That is not the message I am pushing…”


He is cautious, too, as he describes the health claims Hof has made, but is clearly personally persuaded. He has moved with his wife to Boulder, Colorado, in the foothills of the Rockies, where he can experience temperature extremes more easily than on the coast. Still, he stops short of describing himself as a “brown fat” disciple. Though he was seduced by Hof’s philosophy, he attempts to balance that with a clear-eyed examination of the Dutchman’s frailties.


Hof comes across as a kind of freaky Spartan, but not a charlatan. “The good thing is that you would never want to be him,” Carney says. “He has a very disorganised life. Kids with different women, alcoholism in his past. He is flawed and human. I feel that if you hang out with him that makes you trust his really good qualities.”


It’s four years since the pair of them first met in Poland and they remain close friends. Carney has kept up his regime. “I had a cold shower this morning, did my 70 push-ups and 15 minutes of breathing exercise with my wife” (who is also a convert). But it is the understanding of the connection between his health and his environment that has changed his life. “I am much more comfortable with being uncomfortable now,” he says. The understanding of extremes provides, he believes, a sense of “physical perspective”. He feels not only healthier, but part of the natural scheme of things. While our fight or flight responses are as likely to be triggered these days by worrying about the mortgage or getting outraged by the internet, he says, contact with the elements reminds us both of our frailty and our strength.


The regime becomes addictive. A cold shower might release a few endorphins, but it is only a gateway drug. Carney craves the sensation of plunging through ice. “Jumping into very cold water and knowing you will feel warm is pretty cool,” he says. He does it as often as he can.


His book links the psychological appeal of the practice to the attractions of punishing obstacle course challenges, such as Tough Mudder. Carney sees not only a health benefit in those challenges, but also the kind of rite of passage that society rarely affords: “The idea used to be ‘a war will make a man of you,’” he says. “An idea that obviously doesn’t do us any favours. With these kinds of disciplines, you are putting yourself in a challenge and proving you can overcome it. There are many benefits of that.”


As an anthropologist, with an interest in eastern religions, I wonder how much he sees it in an ascetic, monastic tradition. Isn’t it just masochism?


“They are related, but they are not the same,” he says. “Ascetics deny the flesh to get closer to God. That is not the heart of this. It is celebrating what our bodies can do. You don’t have to do it all day every day. You can wear a coat sometimes if you want. I am not suggesting you become a cavemen and ditch the internet and forget modern medicine. It is about balance,” he pauses. “But I guess it certainly shows there can be a joy in pain.”


What Doesn’t Kill Us by Scott Carney is published on 11 May by Scribe Publications at £14.99. To order a copy for £12.74, go to bookshop.theguardian.com



Ice baths and snow meditation can cold therapy make you stronger?

28 Nisan 2017 Cuma

How Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy can Cure Systemic Sclerosis Ulcers

Systemic sclerosis or SSc is a disease that causes fibrosis and vascular disorder along with autoimmune changes. This disease involves fibroblast activity that causes abnormal growth of the connective tissues. SSc gives birth to a number of skin problems including ulcers, itchy skin, and many other complexities. It is difficult to conclude what actually causes systemic sclerosis. It can be considered as a multisystem disease of an unknown cause. The term “autoimmune” (mentioned above) implies that the immune system is responding against the associated tissues. Pathogenesis brings both activated B cells and activated T lymphocytes together. As an outcome, autoantibodies and cytokines affect the cells that channel the blood vessels leading to vasoconstriction and fibroblasts. Fibroblasts produce excessive collagen, a medical complexity that is called fibrosis. Fibrosis is the reason behind Digital ulcers.


Symptoms of SSc


Raynaud phenomenon is the first indication of SSc. Affected patients may find their fingers and toes white and numb. This is the primary and main indication of this disease. Following this indication, other complexities (in most of the cases skin problem) will take place.


SSc and Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT)


Digital and leg ulcers are really hard to handle. Many treatments have been introduced to combat these complications among which hyperbaric oxygen therapy is the most preferred one. A case series has claimed that hyperbaric oxygen therapy or HBOT is really beneficial for SSc ulcers. Bengusu Mirasoglu, from Istanbul University, and his colleagues conducted an experiment on six SSc patients suffering badly from SSc ulcers. Three out of six patients had digital ulcer while the other three had leg ulcers. All of the six patients were given hyperbaric oxygen therapy. After taking the HBOT therapy, four among the six patients had completely recovered while other two patients got near-complete healing. They did not require amputation to cure their ulcers.


A Brief History of HBOT


Hyperbaric oxygen therapy is not a new invention. It has a long history. The origin of hyperbaric therapy dates back nearly 350 years. In its infancy, HBOT treatment was conducted only to treat decompression sickness. During the late 1900s, several studies started shedding light to those indications that can be treated by HBOT. Still, the studies are going on. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has already approved some indications including:


  • Air or Gas Embolism

  • Carbon Monoxide Poisoning

  • Gas Gangrene

  • Crush Injury

  • Decompression Sickness

  • Wound/ulcer Healing

  • Abnormal Blood Loss

  • Intracranial abscess

  • Necrotizing soft tissue infections

  • Radiation injury

  • Skin Grafts and Flaps

  • Thermal Burns

There are many other indications that are not approved by FDA yet, but several studies have established that they can also be effectively treated by hyperbaric oxygen therapy.


How does Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy Combat SSc Ulcers?


In order to receive this treatment, you need to enter into a hyperbaric chamber. 100% pure oxygen is supplied to a hyperbaric chamber. Whenever the patients breathe normally inside the chamber, their bloodstream absorbs the pressurized oxygen with the help of the lungs. Eventually, the oxygen is carried throughout the body by the circulatory system. Overall, the patients receive up to 15 times the amount of the oxygen in comparison to inhaling air at the sea level.


Ulcers affect the blood vessels which are responsible for leaking into the tissue. It causes swelling. HBOT supplies oxygen to the affected tissues to reduce swelling. In this way, hyperbaric oxygen therapy energizes the ulcer-affected tissues and protects them from death.


Mono or Multiplace – Which Hyperbaric Oxygen Chamber is Good for SSc Ulcer?


There are two types of hyperbaric chamber – monoplace and multiplace hyperbaric chamber. In a monoplace chamber, only one person can be treated at a single sitting. Multiplace chamber is much like a submarine. In this hyperbaric chamber, multiple patients can be treated at the same time. For systemic Sclerosis ulcers, you can choose any one type of hyperbaric chamber. Both serve the same function. Choose a chamber that is comfortable to you.


Final Overview


Don’t ignore systemic sclerosis ulcers if you love your life. It can take worst form if you overlook it. Consult your doctor and take hyperbaric oxygen therapy under his/her supervision. It would be better if you start the treatment at an earlier stage.


Feel free to write to us if you have any confusion about hyperbaric oxygen therapy. Lead a healthy life and be happy.



Chloe Paltrow

Chloe Paltrow, MD, is a psychiatrist with more than 20 years of experience. She is also a researcher in the field of neurology. Dr. Paltrow sees patients with different neurodevelopmental disorders and intellectual disabilities. She has shared her knowledge in various websites and blogs like Collective Evolution, PsychCentral and Pick The Brain. Currently, she is studying how brain injury and brain disorders can be treated with hyperbaric chamber, of which OxyHealth is a leading provider.



How Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy can Cure Systemic Sclerosis Ulcers

24 Nisan 2017 Pazartesi

Drugs didn’t work for my brother. Electroconvulsive therapy did | Andrew Mayers

The death certificate said heart attack. But anyone familiar with what my brother had been through over the last decade of his life knew the real cause of death: depression. A self-depleting torment that knew no rock bottom; a psychological tumour that consumed his personality.


Now, looking back after several months on an end that Stephen had said was all he prayed for, I think there was something missing on the certificate: not a cause of death, but a “cause of hope”. That cause was a procedure once derided as the Frankenstein treatment: ECT, or electroconvulsive therapy. Last week it was reported that ECT is on the rise again, with more than 22,000 individual treatments carried out in England in 2015-16.


For some people, this new research will have reawoken old fears of the therapy, and it has certainly brought forth a welter of images of Randle McMurphy, Jack Nicholson’s character in One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, who was laid impossibly low by the treatment. It’s a context in which my brother’s story needs to be heard.


My brother’s case of depression may well have been “severe”, or “psychotic” or “neurochemical”, or any of the labels used in the struggle to understand his condition. But for me the definitive label was “treatment-resistant”.


Antidepressants, tranqs, sleepers, hypnotics, anxiety meds, CBT, visualisation strategies, talking therapies – my brother, bless him, tried every regime, and stuck to them doggedly even as his symptoms escalated. The efforts of the NHS doctors to find the magic formula, the right balance of millilitres and microgrammes, could not be faulted.



Stephen Mayers, front, a month before he died, with brother Andrew, niece Lola, daughter Sienna and wife Yasmin.


Stephen Mayers, front, a month before he died, with brother Andrew, niece Lola, daughter Sienna and wife Yasmin. Photograph: Andrew Mayers

With every regimen change there would be new flickerings of hope. Patience, the psychiatrists always cautioned – there is never a quick fix. If these drugs do work, it might be weeks, months, before the first inkling. But the lesson of the passing years was that the drugs didn’t work. The darkness engulfing Stephen became a tomb. And it engulfed us all – his wife, his daughters, his brothers, his parents.


So it seemed little short of a miracle when a “last resort” treatment penetrated that malign murk – indeed, blew it away. According to data collected by the Guardian, about 2,000 patients were given ECT in 2011. Thank God Stephen was one of them. A life that had been little more than an extended stupor, enlivened only by the gobbling of stodge, was transformed. The principled, generous, engaged soul re-emerged, as if from hibernation.


The addiction to discomfort eating, which brought only self-hatred, was ousted by a renewed passion for cycling. The old Stephen was reborn. As the writer and professor of clinical psychology Andrew Solomon has sagely noted, the opposite of depression is not happiness, but vitality.


My brother ended up getting four amazing, unexpected years of vitality: not a bad result from a seizure lasting less than a minute, triggered by an electrical current applied for up to eight seconds. All under general anaesthetic. No thrashing, no writhing. Perhaps a little toe-curling.


So if there is anything “crude and controversial” about ECT it’s the reaction, from some corners, to the revelation that these treatments are on the rise again. The portrayals that put this procedure on a par with lobotomy belong to a wholly different mental health era. We all know what happened to McMurphy at the hands of Nurse Ratched, but that was a fictional depiction, decades ago. When the Ramones sang Gimme Gimme Shock Treatment they made it sound like something only the truly twisted would consider. The experiences of Sylvia Plath – who described ECT as “a great jolt [that] drubbed me till I thought my bones would break and the sap fly out of me like a split plant” – or Janet Frame, the New Zealand poet incarcerated in asylums and subjected to 200 treatments by sadistic nurses, are brutal. But if anything they demonstrate how far mental healthcare has come.



steve mayers


‘At his funeral one of his fellow cyclists gave an oration. ‘Steve Mayers, what a guy. Steve Mayers, what a guy. Steve Mayers what a guy.’’ Photograph: Yasmin Mayers

Last week the mental health charity Mind warned that the side-effects of ECT could include memory loss, difficulty concentrating and dizziness. In my brother’s case, these were the side-effects of not having ECT. But I still suspect that the ultimate side-effect of not having the procedure was his death last October.


The procedure had given him four precious years of vitality. In the middle of a cycle ride from Land’s End to John O’Groats – to raise money for the Maudsley hospital, in south London, where his treatment was carried out – his illness returned. The doctors knew – we all knew – that his best chance, perhaps his only chance, was another ECT course. But good medical practice meant that first they had to go through the rigmarole of drug regimes they knew would probably fail.


ECT time came agonisingly closer. His depression raged out of control – worse he said, than ever. And on top of this, even grimmer news: a persistent tremor was incipient Parkinson’s. The catastrophic thinking that was the hallmark of his depression now played a terminal role: the ECT miracle, those four years of vitality? A fluke, a trick, a story. Go under general anaesthetic? What happens if it leaves me conscious but paralysed? And anyway, what’s the point in being liberated from depression into a life ravaged by Parkinson’s?


The years of vitality were not to be repeated. But without ECT they would not have happened. At his funeral one of his fellow cyclists gave an oration. “Steve Mayers, what a guy. Steve Mayers, what a guy. Steve Mayers what a guy,” he intoned in broad Wolverhampton.


At the same time pictures flashed up on a big screen of Stephen on a bike. Forget Jack Nicholson, I thought. My big brother’s the positive face of ECT.



Drugs didn’t work for my brother. Electroconvulsive therapy did | Andrew Mayers

17 Nisan 2017 Pazartesi

Electroconvulsive therapy on the rise again in England

The use of electroconvulsive therapy to treat serious mental health problems, a procedure long thought to be in steep decline, is on the rise again in England, a Guardian analysis indicates.


Exclusive data covering four-fifths of NHS mental health trusts in England shows that more than 22,600 individual ECT treatments were carried out in 2015-16, a rise of 11% from four years ago, when about 20,400 were carried out.


The number of patients treated also rose, albeit more modestly, to more than 2,200, suggesting that on average individuals undergo more ECT procedures than before.


The figures, obtained through freedom of information requests, show that despite being a crude, controversial treatment, which fell sharply out of favour around the turn of the millennium, ECT is enjoying a revival.


The procedure involves anaesthetising the patient and passing electricity through the brain to induce seizure. Despite ghoulish depictions in popular culture and a marked lack of science explaining how and why it works, treatments can prove effective. Patient stories range from life-changing benefits to tales of lives being ruined.


The data collected by the Guardian covers 44 NHS trusts that provided comparable data. Figures for private clinics are not included.


After considerable fluctuation over the last four years, a comparison of figures from 2012-13 and 2015-16 reveals an 11% rise when it comes to the number of ECT treatments. Almost two-thirds of NHS trusts reported a rise in the number of ECT treatments carried out over the four-year period. The average number of ECT treatments per patient also rose, from 9.6 in 2012-13 to 10.1 four years later.


The changes in ECT were more striking in some parts of the country than others. While the number of treatments carried out by Mersey Care NHS trust, for example, has remained fairly constant over the last four years, the figures for Lincolnshire Partnership NHS foundation trust show a 75% increase in treatments.


Experts and practitioners say a slew of factors could be responsible for the revival. Some say it is down to improved patient access, lack of credible alternatives for serious cases of mental illness and the fact that in many cases ECT does seem to make a difference.


“I think [ECT] should be on the increase because it has been underused for a number of years,” said Tim Oakley, chair of the ECT Accreditation Service (ECTAS) accreditation committee and a clinical director at the Northumberland, Tyne and Wear NHS foundation trust.


“There are some patients who would respond very well to ECT who perhaps don’t get it as quickly as they should or don’t get it at all for various reasons,” he said. “In terms of getting people better, particularly for depression where everything else fails, it is still the best treatment.”


Others point to the patchwork nature of provision – popular in some parts of the country, not in others – as a sign that it is down to local medical preferences.


“The decision about whether ECT is to be used or not is based on the quirks of the local psychiatrist,” said Richard Bentall, professor of clinical psychology at Liverpool University. “There are some places where psychiatrists think it works, and they just do it lots of times, and there are some places where people think: ‘Bloody hell, I don’t think the evidence for this is very good,’ so will only do it in absolutely desperate circumstances.”


He added: “My view is that ECT is a classic failure of evidence-based medicine. I don’t believe that there are adequate clinical trials of ECT to establish its effectiveness.”


While some, including Oakley, have argued that historical ECT trials do show a benefit from the treatment, Bentall believes their design was not up to scratch, and said the data obtained by the Guardian highlighted the need for large randomised placebo-controlled clinical trials – a proposal some proponents of ECT have argued would be unethical.


But Bentall said: “It is clearly unethical to pass electric shocks across people’s brains unless it is effective [and] helpful to do so and therefore there is an ethical requirement to show that treatment is effective.”


Others have suggested the increase in number of ECT treatments could be down to a change from bilateral to unilateral therapy, where the electrodes are applied to one side of the head, rather than at both temples.


“That has slightly fewer side-effects and is less likely to cause memory impairment,” said Andrew Molodynski, consultant psychiatrist at Oxford Health NHS foundation trust and national mental health lead of the British Medical Association’s consultant committee. “It is also slightly less powerful, so it might be that if more people are having that then they are needing slightly more treatments.”


“It is by far the most powerful treatment for depression,” he added. “As a treatment it is certainly not bad as long as it is done properly and for the right people, which is people with genuinely treatment-resistant depression.” While Molodynski added that he did not believe it would be ethical to carry out new clinical trials of the effectiveness of ECT, he thought studies into outcomes over prolonged periods would be valuable.


But Molodynski pointed out that the Guardian figures suggested either that the procedure was being used more freely, or that more people appeared to be falling into the category of those with treatment-resistant depression.


He said the increase should be viewed negatively if it was a result of people with less severe forms of depression not getting the care they needed. “Equally, if people are resorting to ECT for inpatients more quickly, because it works more quickly than antidepressants, in order to get them out of hospital because of our perpetual bed crisis, that would be a major concern.”


One ECT service manager from a London-based mental health trust, who asked not to be named, said the Guardian findings tallied with his own experience of a recent rise in ECT use, adding that the trend was likely to be linked to changes in practice and better regulations, with people becoming more accepting of the procedure. “Our trust treated more patients last year than they have ever treated before,” he said.


A 2014-15 survey which included clinical outcomes for 2,148 people, published by ECTAS and covering England, Wales, Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland, reported that 91.5% of patients had improved after the treatment, compared with 1.7% who had become worse.


The mental health charity Mind, however, warned of side-effects, pointing to a 2003 survey it carried out with patients who had undergone ECT who reported memory loss, difficulty concentrating and dizziness.


While the idea of inducing a seizure for therapeutic reasons was first recorded in 1785, ECT was not developed until the 1930s. It was subsequently introduced to England and was commonly used well into the 1960s and 1970s.


But its use waned towards the end of the 20th century. According to the Royal College of Psychiatrists: “Between 1985 and 2002, its use in England more than halved, possibly because of better psychological and drug treatments for depression.”


Dr Rob Chaplin, from the Royal College of Psychiatrists, said: “Previous data collection has shown a decline in ECT, but this appears to have plateaued, perhaps suggesting a change in attitude towards a therapy that has historically been poorly administered and badly misunderstood.


“Since the launch of our accreditation service for ECT in 2003, safety standards have doubled, making ECT in the UK one of the best in the world.


“There is unmistakable evidence that electroconvulsive therapy is an effective treatment for many depressive illnesses, and can act much faster than drugs.”


At present, the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (Nice) advises that ECT be used only as a last resort for those with prolonged or severe manic episodes, who are in a catatonic state, or who have severe depression or moderate depression when other treatments have not worked.


The data


There is a dearth of information on how widely ECT is used, so the Guardian requested data from every English NHS mental health trust, as listed by the Care Quality Commission, under the Freedom of Information Act for a 10-year period between 2005-06 and 2015-16.


It quickly became clear that many trusts either did not hold or could not access relevant data for the decade covered by the request.


The vast majority could not provide data for the full 10-year period requested. The data presented here begins in 2012 for that reason: a number of trusts were unable to provide figures prior to that year.


Three trusts refused the request outright, saying the staff time required to comply with the request was too great, while seven trusts could not even provide consistent data from 2012-13 onwards. Some trusts admitted they were missing data over periods of months in certain years.


Two trusts provided data that turned out to be completely incorrect, only providing accurate figures after multiple contacts.


The majority of the trusts provided financial year data. However, in those cases where calendar year data was provided, the data was grouped with the closest financial year.


This project may have revealed an increase in ECT use in England but it has also uncovered a lack of properly collected data relating to the procedure.



Electroconvulsive therapy on the rise again in England

30 Mart 2017 Perşembe

How does Hyperbaric Chamber Therapy Improve Athletic Performance?

No matter whether you are a professional athlete or a fitness fanatic, hyperbaric chamber therapy can help you out. Even if you feel fatigue after your workout session, you can consider this therapy. Hyperbaric oxygen therapy or HBOT is the key to fulfilling all of your fitness goals. Many professional athletes have admitted the benefits of hyperbaric oxygen therapy. Professionals prefer to buy chambers that can be used at their homes. Even, many pro athletes have admired the effectiveness of HBOT.


You would be surprised to know that an average NFL player can play maximum 3.5 years, soccer 2 years, baseball players 6 years, and basketball players only 5 years. Due to the advancement of modern medical science, the professional athletes are looking for hyperbaric chamber therapy to recover their injury faster and perform better. In the initial stages of HBOT, it was applied to scuba divers only. Many scuba divers reported that they got rid of the joint stiffness after going through the therapy.


Hyperbaric chamber therapy heals injuries three times faster than the traditional treatment methods. Most of the people have reported that they feel refreshed after going through the sessions of HBOT. On the other hand, there are some people who have shared their euphoric experience after going through the treatment. It can happen due to the pure oxygen environment during the session. Pain level can be reduced by this therapy and this is why the professional athletes need the therapy frequently.


Let’s have a quick look the benefits the athletes can reap from hyperbaric oxygen therapy.


1. Recovery:


HBOT facilitates a faster resumption from critical injuries. An athlete needs to deal with injuries throughout his/her career. Hyperbaric oxygen therapy also improves both the long and short-term prognosis of their injuries.


2. Fatigue:


If oxygen supply to a musculoskeletal system increases in the state of fatigue, it can activate the cellular activity. This process also increases adenosine triphosphate (ATP) synthesis by promoting the metabolism of fatigue elements. Hyperbaric oxygen therapy is known as a method that promotes a quick recovery from fatigue.


3. Performance:


The increase in oxygen supply or oxygenation has a number of health benefits including cell growth, detoxification, regeneration, immune support, new capillary growth, and improvement in neurological functioning.


How does it function?


Generally, a human being consumes almost six pounds of oxygen each day. Oxygen is no doubt the most important element required for a healthy living. Oxygen has multiple functions in the body. But primarily, energy production is the main role of oxygen. We all know that only fifty percent of energy is provided by fats and carbohydrates that we consume. Our cells need to convert this stored energy into the molecules of ATP with the help of oxygen.


Hyperbaric oxygen therapy increases the pressure of oxygen partially. It dissolves the oxygen into the plasma and other fluids of our body. Water and the gas get dissolved into the system and both of these two elements can cross the cells’ semi-permeable membrane through osmosis. It is known to all that our human body is made of almost 70 percent water. Our cells almost bath into this water. Hyperbaric chamber supplies oxygen to every tissue in our body to further the process mentioned above. Professional athletes always go through hard training. HBOT helps them to reduce the pain and stress caused by the training. Often they get injured. To be fit before an upcoming event, HBOT is the best option for the athletes through which they can recover from their injuries or wounds in a short period of time.


The Food and Drug Administration has approved hyperbaric oxygen therapy for certain indications; recovery from injuries or wound healing is one of them. In most of the cases, athletes use HBOT for this purpose. Athletes go through several injuries because they spend most of their times in a rough environment. When you will enter the hyperbaric chamber, and the session will be started, all of your organs will be saturated in the presence of hundred percent pure oxygen. Athletes can energize themselves effectively by continuing HBOT.


A Final Takeaway:


From the above discussion, it is clear that the relevance of hyperbaric oxygen therapy is rapidly increasing in the field of sports. A professional athlete can take this therapy for multiple reasons. Even aspirant athletes (who are still struggling to get known as professionals) are also inclined towards the treatment for reaping the benefits.


Are you in search of information regarding similar topics? Write us what you need to know. We will try our best to discuss the topics you are looking for.



Chloe Paltrow

Chloe Paltrow, MD, is a psychiatrist with more than 20 years of experience. She is also a researcher in the field of neurology. Dr. Paltrow sees patients with different neurodevelopmental disorders and intellectual disabilities. She has shared her knowledge in various websites and blogs like Collective Evolution, PsychCentral and Pick The Brain. Currently, she is studying how brain injury and brain disorders can be treated with hyperbaric chamber, of which OxyHealth is a leading provider.



How does Hyperbaric Chamber Therapy Improve Athletic Performance?

27 Şubat 2017 Pazartesi

HEALING AUTISM: A Family Constellation Therapy Perpective

Family Constellation Therapy, sometimes known as Systemic Constellations, was created by Bert Hellinger, a German psychotherapist. This amazing method is used to uncover the source of chronic conditions, illnesses and emotional difficulties that may have roots in the inter-generational family systems, rather than the individual, and may be connected to a key stress event. Could resolving past family trauma help unlock the symptoms known as autism. Sadly, some form of autism is now observed in 1 in 55 children and is growing at a rate of more than 1,100 percent. Western medicine focuses on medication to suppress symptoms and alternative approaches focus on treating the underlying biomedical, physical, psychological and environmental causes of autism.


However, illness not only originates in our physical body, but can also originate in our energetic and spiritual body as well. So, it becomes imperative that we treat the entire person for a fuller recovery.


“Autism spectrum disorders can only be fully healed by restoring the self-regulation of the system and making it fully functional.” Klinghardt


This moving and powerful work in the family’s energetic field. This is  also referred to as “the knowing field.” And, is used to examine the emotional factors connected to conditions such as illness, allergies, alcoholism, ADHD and autism. Some parents of children on the autism spectrum have experienced profound transformations as a result of this work for themselves, as well as for their families.


These children are often the recipients of unhealed trans-generational family issues because of their extraordinary energetic sensitivities.  This perpetuates their illness.


Family constellation therapy work, focuses deeper on the ancestral family blueprint – the family soul. Our souls carry information from one lifetime to the next and from one generation to the next.


Children often hold the energetic field of their ancestors. This appears especially true with children with autism, because they are super-sensitive and spiritual souls.  Who, often become unconsciously entangled with others in their family in the name of belonging or wanting to help restore balance in their family system. The purpose of a Family Constellation therapy session is to reveal that hidden dynamic and point the way toward resolution.  And, there are often magical improvements in these children when we resolve issues in the family history.


The Forgotten One


One of the participants in a group “Michelle,” has a brother with severe autism who couldn’t speak and was very self-destructive. She was afraid that he could never live a more “normal” life because he refused all biomedical treatment and other therapies offered to him. In the initial set-up, the facilitator had Michelle, her brother, and both parents of her family represented  in “the field.”


The participant representing her brother was hiding under a nearby chair and was rocking back and forth. Both parents were standing in the field, seemingly disinterested in what was going on. The sister (Michelle) kept looking down at the floor. Later in the set-up, it was revealed that the sister was looking down at a baby—a baby who had died of birth defects three generations ago. This baby hadn’t been properly acknowledged or mourned.


In essence, the brother with autism had taken the place of the “forgotten” baby. Representatives for the great-grandparents (the forgotten baby’s parents) were brought into “the field.” Then, the baby was embraced by the parents and a short dialogue was exchanged. The baby reported that he felt more at ease, relaxed and became more comfortable. A healing took place that was so profound.  A year later, “Michelle” reported that her brother was starting to take a more active role in his recovery and was beginning to accept treatment.


War and Mental Illness


“Andrew,” a man in his twenties who was diagnosed with Asperger’s, participated in my group. He claimed that mental illness and psychosis ran in his family. He cried as he explained that he was taking multiple medications for bi-polar disorder. He claimed it was difficult for him to hold down a job.  He often felt very alone. He stated that he did not have a good relationship with his parents. He said that his mom was “crazy.” The parents divorced when his was very small and he blames himself and his issues for why they split.


In the initial set-up of “his field,” Andrew was represented along with mental illness and his parents.   As it unfolded, it became more obvious that something profound had happened in the past. Mental illness began taking on characteristics of a war and hidden dynamics were revealing themselves.


Later in the set-up, Andrew’s representative started choking, like he was trying to catch his breath. He was mumbling, “I deserve death because I have killed others.”


It was uncovered that his great-great grandfather was in World War I and was killed during a mustard gas attack. Andrew was doing service to the family out of deep love. He took on the feelings of the victim and the perpetrator, which caused him deep inner conflict. Hence, he was carrying the burden of mental illness and autism. In doing this soul work, Andrew was able to find resolution for himself as well as all the members of his family.


In conclusion, trans-generational traumas add to our toxic burden and predispose us to illness. Misfortune or unresolved conflict in our ancestry can create disturbances in the family field, which filter down into the psyche, nervous system and metabolic functioning. Children with health issues are particularly sensitive to such disturbances.


Therapy and biomedical interventions may even succeed better after a healing Family Constellation session with an experienced facilitator. Fortunately, it is never too late to heal wounds from the past. Constellation work is unique in that any living family member can do this intervention for the benefit of all.


 Learn more about her book and her work to spread holistic health awareness at www.healingwithouthurting.com or  Healing Without Hurting: Treating ADHD, Apraxia and Autism Spectrum Disorders Naturally and Effectively without Harmful Medication.



HEALING AUTISM: A Family Constellation Therapy Perpective

I"m starting a new job, but will need to take time off soon for therapy

Twice a week we publish problems that will feature in a forthcoming Dear Jeremy advice column in the Saturday Guardian so that readers can offer their own advice and suggestions. We then print the best of your comments alongside Jeremy’s own insights.


I’m about to start a new job, my first with any prospect of security after several years of juggling part-time, short-term contracts, and I’m keen to make a good impression.


However, my previous work pattern and some of the stresses involved have taken their toll and I’ve been struggling with depression for a while. I have just been offered a few months of therapy on the NHS, starting in the next couple of weeks.


The catch is, to take this up I would need to take some time out of my working day. As a certain amount of my work is fairly independent of my colleagues’ input, making up the hours won’t be a problem. I’ve already worked out a few strategies to do this, depending on what would best fit with my new employer’s work pattern.


My worry is that I don’t know how to broach the subject – starting a new job by declaring any health issues is difficult enough, but I fear they may see those involving mental health as a stigma and this makes this worse.


How can I best approach this? I don’t feel I can let the opportunity for treatment go. I’ve done the sums and there’s just no way I can afford to get this privately, now or in the foreseeable future, but I also need this job.


Do you need advice on a work issue? For Jeremy’s and readers’ help, send a brief email to dear.jeremy@theguardian.com. Please note that he is unable to answer questions of a legal nature or to reply personally.



I"m starting a new job, but will need to take time off soon for therapy

28 Ocak 2017 Cumartesi

6 Potential Benefits of Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy

Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT) is a process of using oxygen higher than the atmospheric pressure, which is now used in treating various treatments. The word “Hyper” refers to “increased” and “baric” refers to “pressure”. While we breathe, normally we take in 20% oxygen and the rest 80% is nitrogen. But while undergoing Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy, a person’s whole body is exposed to 100% of pure oxygen greater than the normal atmospheric pressure. Here the pressure is increased to about twice the normal pressure. (i.e 2 ATA).


Experts recommend Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT) as it is simple, safe, non-invasive and non-toxic. The process provides all the support that is required to heal and effectively fights against infection which is vital for treating any illness. Moreover, it improves the patient’s quality of life after the treatment positively.


When there is an increased pressure and oxygen, it results in dissolving the oxygen throughout the tissues and blood cells which is 10 times more than the normal concentration. This repairs the damaged cells, relieves pain, and fights against infection. This process has proved to be effective in treating various illnesses.


The benefits of Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT) are listed below:


1. Increases blood flow and oxygen levels:


Though there is block in blood flow, this therapy can increase the oxygen in all parts of the body and the tissues. With induced vasoconstriction and hyper-oxygenation, HBOT increases the plasma-oxygen concentration which is 10 to 15 times more than the usual level.


The hyperbaric oxygen therapy boosts the level of Oxygen (O2) in the blood stream which in turn treats the damaged cells by stimulating the release of chemicals.W This promotes the healing process and also improves the formation of new blood vessels.


2. Reduces damages of toxic gases and radiation:


When a patient’s tissues are exposed to oxygen under pressure, it reduces the damages that are caused by toxic gases like carbon monoxide and forces them out from the body.


Patients suffering from cancer are treated under radiation which in turn results in chronic bone and tissue damages due to the radiation effects. While the radiation therapy kills the cancer cells, it also damages other blood cells that are surrounded. In few cases, those radiations may damage the blood flow and cause bleeding.


With the help of hyperbaric oxygen therapy, new capillaries are grown in the place of damaged ones, thereby stopping the bleeding.


3. Heals wounds, burns and other traumatic injury:


Hyperbaric therapy causes vasoconstriction without affecting oxygenation of tissues significantly. This could help in managing intermediate compartment syndrome and in addition reduces inflammation. This action can speed up the healing process for all types of wounds, burns and other traumatic injuries.


4. Aids in new blood vessel growth and also stimulates growth of new tissues:


One of the important benefits of Hyperbaric oxygen therapy is that it provides an excellent condition for new tissue growth, as oxygen therapy encourages collagen to form which is a basic foundation for new blood vessels. Mainly, this oxygen healing process stimulates the new cell growth in the damaged tissues which is very important in healing an injured part. All these factors when combined, provides the result faster.


5. Helps in recovery from brain injury:


With the stimulated tissue growth, metabolism and blood flow, hyperbaric oxygen therapy provided scientific evidence of being helpful in treating patients with brain injuries. In this treatment, the dormant neurons are reawakened. Hence, the therapy can improve the recovery from injuries in brain by invigorating the sleeping neurons.


6. Fights against Infections:


The tissues inside the patient’s body are saturated with oxygen, after the procedure of hyperbaric oxygen therapy. This reduces the anaerobic bacteria which thrives to cause infection and spreads throughout the body. The oxygen therapy enhances the white blood action in order to kill the bacteria and fungi.


Note that all the patients do not qualify for the hyperbaric therapy treatment. Following are the conditions that are approved to seek the hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBOT) treatment:


  • Decompression sickness

  • Severe anemia

  • Delayed radiation effects

  • Carbon monoxide poisoning

  • Crush injury

  • Chronic bone infections

  • Arterial insufficiencies

  • Air embolism

  • Intracranial abscesses

  • Soft tissue infections

  • Acute brain injury

Recently, oxygen therapy is also involved in the treatment of chronic degenerative health problems such as stroke, diabetic ulcers, brain injury, atherosclerosis, peripheral vascular disease, macular degeneration, cerebral palsy, wound healing, multiple sclerosis and many other disorders. Hyperbaric oxygen therapy aids in the treatment whenever there is reduced blood flow and oxygen to the parts of the body. For instance, if a patient’s brain is injured by stroke, trauma or CP, hyperbaric oxygen therapy has the ability to reactivate the damaged parts and hence, restore proper function.



6 Potential Benefits of Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy

24 Ocak 2017 Salı

Radical ketamine therapy could treat alcohol addiction

Scientists believe that a radical treatment involving the horse tranquilliser, ketamine, could help overcome alcohol addiction by “erasing” drink-related memories.


Psychologists based at University College London are testing whether a one-off dose of the drug could help hazardous drinkers who are trying to reduce their alcohol intake. Alcohol addiction is notoriously difficult to treat, and there are few effective therapies available.


Using a recreational drug to treat addiction may sound counterintuitive, but the researchers say there is a growing body of research suggesting that ketamine can be used to disrupt harmful patterns of behaviour.


Ravi Das, one of the lead researchers, said: “There is evidence that it could be useful as a treatment for alcoholism.”


Crucially, ketamine can block the formation of memories, and scientists believe that this property could be harnessed to help over-write the memories that drive addiction and harmful patterns of behaviour.


“Memories that you form can be hijacked by drugs in some people,” said Das. “If you were an alcoholic you might have a strong memory of being in a certain place and wanting to drink. Those memories get continuously triggered by things in the environment that you can’t avoid.”


Scientists believe that psychological cravings, as opposed to short-term physical withdrawal, are underpinned by alcohol-related memories. For instance, seeing a glass of beer, hearing the clinking of glasses or even arriving home from work may trigger memories of the rewarding sensation of taking a drink – and might prompt a person to follow this urge.


“The main problem is the really high relapse rate after treatment,” said Das. “People can successfully quit using over the short term while they’re being monitored in the hospital … but when they return home they’re exposed to those environmental triggers again.”


There is increasing evidence, however, that memories are less stable than once assumed and may be open to manipulation.


Each time our brain accesses a memory, the neural connections that encode it are temporarily destabilised, meaning that our recollection can be slightly altered before it goes back into storage. This is one reason why, in everyday life, people can recall wildly different versions of the same events.


In the clinic, scientists believe this short period of instability in the memories, represents a window of opportunity. Ketamine blocks a brain receptor called NMDA, which is required for the formation of memories. So the logic is that giving someone the drug just as a memory has been destabilised could help weaken the memory, or even erase it.


A similar approach with a different drug was shown to eradicate people’s phobia of spiders. And research in rats that were made to be addicted to cocaine showed that the memories underpinning their addiction could be completely wiped out using a similar strategy (although this involved injecting a chemical into the brain).


In the UCL trial, the scientists will intentionally trigger alcohol-related memories by placing a glass of beer in front of the participants, who are all heavy drinkers. They will then disrupt the memory, by surprising the participant (the team is not disclosing the exact details as this could bias the results).


Participants will then be given either a ketamine infusion, with a concentration equivalent to a high recreational dose, or a placebo. The team will follow up the people for a year and monitor whether their drinking has changed and by how much.


In total the scientists are aiming to include 90 people in the trial and more than 50 have already taken part. It involves people who drink harmful quantities of alcohol, but excludes anyone who meets the clinical criteria for alcoholism. The participants were drinking at least 40 units for men (equivalent to four bottles of strong wine) and 28 units for women, and drinking on at least four days.


Nikki, 31, who works as a consultant in London said she decided to take part in the study when she had some time off between jobs and realised she was drinking more than she wanted to. “It’s just in the culture, that’s what all my friends are like. Everyone drinks to excess,” she said.


She described the experience of being given the ketamine as “overwhelming and intense”, but not unpleasant. “My body felt like it was melting away,” she said. “It was quite psychedelic, I felt untethered from my body.”


In the week after the session, she said, she felt in an “incredibly positive mood” and that since taking part she has been more conscious about deciding whether to have a drink, although said this could also be linked to starting a new job and taking up meditation. “In the past, there were occasions where I would be drinking and I’d be on autopilot ‘Let’s get another drink’,” she said.


If the trial yields promising results, the team hope that the approach could form the basis for therapy sessions targeted at alcoholics and people who are drinking unhealthily. However, they acknowledge that there may be resistance to the use of a recreational drug to treat people with addiction.


“There’s just the general social attitude that everything that’s illegal is terrible. There will obviously be that kind of narrow-sighted pushback,” said Das. “But if it’s safe and effective enough it should be recommended.”


Andrew Misell, a spokesman for Alcohol Concern, said: “The researchers have quite rightly highlighted what a lot of people in recovery from alcohol problems know from experience, namely that cues or triggers like the smell of beer can cause a relapse even after long periods of abstinence. Any work looking at how people can overcome these pitfalls is going to be useful.”


However, he added, no drug-based therapy is risk-free “and that certainly includes ketamine”.



Radical ketamine therapy could treat alcohol addiction

16 Ocak 2017 Pazartesi

How Hyperbaric Therapy can Contribute to Diabetic Foot Wound Healing?

Oxygen has been an inevitable agent to the creatures since the ancient age. The human race has gone through a lot of evolution and has gained success in medical science, technology and every sphere related to human life. And with the advancement of time, oxygen has become the most versatile agent in medical science as well. Today, the use of oxygen in the hyperbaric oxygen therapy or HBOT has become really common for wound healing. This is nothing new. Since almost 40 years, oxygen is being used to treat wounds. And now, hyperbaric therapy wound healing has become the most effective and reliable treatment for countless people.


It has been established that hyperbaric oxygen therapy is very effective for diabetic foot wounds. According to the medical practitioners, around fifteen percent of all diabetes patients suffer from diabetic foot ulcers at a point of time. In general, 17 million people in the United States are victims of diabetes and one million cases are found to be diagnosed per year. Among these patients, almost 70 percent have diabetic neuropathies that can lead one to diabetic foot ulcers. Now let’s discuss how hyperbaric oxygen treatment can treat diabetic wounds or foot ulcers.


First of all, it is important to know what is HBOT. HBOT is a treatment which provides the patients 100 oxygen to inhale in a pressurized chamber. The treatment increases the level of oxygen in the blood. This therapy also supplies pure oxygen to the damaged tissues to make the healing faster. It can also provide the pharmacological doses of oxygen in order to heal the wounded tissues.


How does it work?


HBOT increases the saturation level of oxygen in the blood when the atmospheric pressure in the hyperbaric chamber is enhanced. This increase of oxygen influences the white blood cell activity and the development of tissues. Apart from these, it also induces capillary growth.


The procedure in detail:


There are two kinds of the hyperbaric chambers. In the Monoplace Chambers, only one patient can be treated at a time while there are some large hyperbaric chambers, called Multiplace Chambers, where a dozen of people can be treated at the same time. Now let’s have a look at how the procedure of hyperbaric therapy wound healing goes on:



  • In a monoplace chamber, you will be instructed to lie on a table that is slided into the monoplace chamber, which is a 7 feet long plastic tube.



After the session:


When your HBOT session is finished, you may feel a bit tired. This may continue for a short period of time and after that, you will feel better.


How far HBOT is beneficial for diabetic foot ulcers:


If diabetic foot ulcer is not treated at the right time, then it can lead you to amputation. The healing of this kind of wounds has improved a lot after the popularization of HBOT. It has become possible as the tissues around the ulcer are exposed to the oxygen that is supplied by HBOT. If you can see no sign of healing after one month of taking traditional treatment, you should not waste a single day and start taking HBOT as soon as possible.


However, HBOT should only be taken after consulting and seeking the advice of a qualified doctor. The treatment is conducted under the supervision of an authorized medical practitioner.


Final Thought:


Hyperbaric oxygen therapy can be regarded as a powerful treatment for chronic wounds and it treats the affected tissues in a number of ways. HBOT up-regulates the growth factors, regulates cytokines, helps angiogenesis and reduces oedema. Several studies have confirmed its positive impacts in healing diabetic foot ulcers. If you have suffered a lot for this particular wound, embrace hyperbaric therapy wound healing to get back to your normal life.


If you are in search of a reliable hyperbaric therapy wound healing provider, you can consider California Integrative Hyperbaric Center.



How Hyperbaric Therapy can Contribute to Diabetic Foot Wound Healing?

30 Kasım 2016 Çarşamba

Should women with PMS get free therapy on the NHS?

More than a million women who struggle with severe PMS should be offered free therapy, according to the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists. It argues that Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT) is more effective than antidepressants. Is this a breakthrough, or yet another way of pathologising femininity?


Four in 10 women report anxiety, depression, irritability, mood swings and a dip in confidence in the days leading up to their period. Women, and their partners, often describe a Jekyll-and-Hyde type “me” and “not me” difference. This discourse stems, partly, from the media – women are often portrayed as being “out of control”, and at the mercy of their raging hormones.


CBT for PMS seems to work – when it works – by giving women back a sense of hope. For example, where a woman might interpret changing physiological cues as unmanageable, leading to a sense of loss of control, a CBT therapist might encourage them to keep a diary to map their experiences at different phases of the menstrual cycle, in order to train the body to self-soothe. Or perhaps even to question perfectionist standards that make feeling bad seem disastrous.


Though CBT may help individual women feel empowered, the advice is pretty basic. And, at a societal level, the medicalisation of PMS has huge costs. The NHS is broke. It’s difficult to get therapy for even the most serious problems. By framing PMS as a disorder that 40% of women suffer from, we create a new population that views its experiences as abnormal, and without the means to be helped. By framing it as a disorder, we also turn our gaze away from its causes: the sexism of the Jekyll and Hyde depictions that provide the lens through which we interpret body and mood changes. The issues that the emotional premenstrual surge often attempt to communicate are often far from irrational. The sudden fury, say, at always doing the washing-up, the feelings of not being appreciated, being ugly; such issues are deeply embedded within gender dynamics. Framing PMS as a disorder requiring medical intervention is thus an obscurating political act.


Rather than promising to offer CBT to more than a million women, a call unlikely to be heeded in cash-strapped times, we must attempt instead to educate girls in the trials, tribulations, beauty and power of the female reproductive system. We must listen to our bodies, and to one another again – not to the discourse of disorder.


Jay Watts is a clinical psychologist, psychotherapist and senior lecturer working in London



Should women with PMS get free therapy on the NHS?

2 Kasım 2016 Çarşamba

De-Stress And Heal Your Body With Sound Therapy

Implemented by a variety of cultures for thousands of years, sound healing helps you get more balanced. Whether chanting mantras, participating in a drumming circle, or simply humming along with a melody, such actions can help transform you from a state of imbalance to one of balance. And when this almost meditative state of being is reach, your body can unleash it’s natural healing powers. Whether you suffer from anxiety, chronic pain, or another disorder, sound therapy may help you effectively manage the condition.


How Does Sound Healing Work?


If you do mediation, then you already have a sense of how powerful sound is to our state of being. Sound can alter our brainwaves to that they keep pace with external rhythms. They key is that the sound needs to be consistent so that the stable rhythm entrains the body’s brainwaves. While it might sound a bit clinical, what this means for you is that your normal state of consciousness synchs up with the sound’s rhythm and effectively downgrade that state of being. You can shift to relaxed consciousness, a meditative state, and even the sleep state.


You can incorporate sound healing into your daily routine via simple vocal tuning and breathing exercises. With regular sessions, you can use sound healing to awaken the body’s natural healing response.


How It Feels


When you participate in sound therapy, you enter a more relaxed state of being. It is very similar to meditation, except that laying down for sound healing is more common that it is with meditation. During this state, you become more aware of the sound’s frequency and open to its vibrations.


Consider how loud, unwelcome sounds make the body feel, such as the loud screen of the stopping subway train or the whirring sirens when emergency services drive past you. Such sounds make the body tense up and boosts stress levels, which lowers your immune response. The exact opposite happens with sound healing. Stress levels decrease and the body relaxes, which results in a healthier immune response.


What Can Sound Therapy Treat?


Sound can heal a variety of the body’s ailments, especially during the sleep stage. Some of the ailments that can be effectively managed with sound therapy include:


  • PTSD

  • Anxiety

  • Migraines

  • Depression

  • Pain Management

  • Insomnia and Other Sleep Disorders

  • Stress

  • Panic Attacks

  • Muscle Pain

Joshua Leeds, author of The Power of Sound, has even noted positive results when using sound healing with autistic children. Practitioner Bill Harris uses rain sound machines and crystal bowls to treat conditions that are exacerbated by stress like irritable bowel syndrome, psoriasis, and chronic pain. Los Angeles-based sound healer Jamie Bechtold uses tuning forks to create sound vibrations that heal headaches, colds, and pulled muscles.


How To Get Started With Sound Healing


If you live in a city like Los Angeles, then it is easy to locate a sound healing practitioner. These professional often do group and private sessions, sometimes combining yoga practice with the sound therapy.


For those not in a major metropolitan area, look for a local sound healing group on Meetup.com. Or, take to the internet where you can listen to a sound healing MP3, such as a Tibetan chant, or watch sound therapy videos on YouTube.


Sources:



De-Stress And Heal Your Body With Sound Therapy

25 Ekim 2016 Salı

7 Tips for Opening Your Own Physical Therapy Clinic

Maybe you have decided that you want to open your own physical therapy clinic to help others. This is something that on one hand is relatively easy to do, but like any other business, there are downsides. You can’t just open a clinic and expect it to be filled with people and the money to just be rolling in. You really do have to work at it just like any other business if you truly want it to succeed. If you have decided that this is something you want to do, here are some tips to help get you on your way.


1. Start Out Slowly


If you have just completed your physical therapist training program, it is a good idea to work in the industry for a little while before opening your own clinic. Grow your experience at other clinics, and grow a following. Then, when you are ready to start your own clinic, you will have people lining up.


2. Learn how to be Confrontational


This probably goes against everything you learned during your training program. But, in order to be successful in business, you can’t be the type who lets others walk all over you. You need to learn how to be a leader, and how to say “no” when you have to. Learn how to deal with constructive criticism, but also know when you need to give it.


3. Treat Your Studio Like a Business


Your clinic will be a legitimate business, and you want it to make money for you. So, you need to treat it like a real business. Yes, you probably have a passion for physical therapy and want to share, but remember, if you offer too much for free aren’t going to make any money, and you are going to devalue your service.


4. Create Your Brand


Your brand, or your corporate identity, is important. It is the combination of what people see and the reputation that you earn as a business person. Your brand should combine your clinic name, the location of your clinic, logos and colors, and of course, the high quality of the service you are offering.


5. Don’t Expect Instant Riches


Most business do not make much money in the first year of operation, and this can particularly be said of physical therapy clinic. This is not a way to get rich quick. You will have to invest a lot of money to get started, for such things as space, equipment, instructors, etc. You won’t show an instant profit, but with hard work and dedication, you will succeed.


6. Learn how to be a People Person


You will need to learn more skills for dealing with people, because you are the face of your business, and people will want to talk to you about it.


7. Learn Financial Responsibility


It can be difficult to go overboard when starting a business, and you end up spending so much money that you can never dig the business out of a hole to show a profit. Don’t go out and hire a huge staff right away, or rent the largest clinic space. Do what you can afford to do now, and build from there. Over time, you will achieve the success you really desire.


Resources:



7 Tips for Opening Your Own Physical Therapy Clinic

7 Ekim 2016 Cuma

How Body Therapy is Great for Depression

Treatment for depression is a difficult thing to find. For different patients will come different types of therapy. Some patients may try to use the same therapy for years until they realize that it isn’t working. Perhaps this is because they don’t realize that straight on therapy isn’t enough. Many people with depression don’t understand all their symptoms right away. Over eating or not eating enough is a symptom that cannot always be detected by the person who is doing it to themselves. Not all depression is buried deep down inside. Some treatment for depression doesn’t work with just talking about one’s feelings. Perhaps in some circumstances it’s the body that must be looked at.


Getting up and Getting Out


It’s possible that mild forms of depression are only there because people who are suffering are not getting up and out of the house as much. Reasons range from having kids to working from home to possibly just not enjoying life as much as they should. The best thing for this is to get out of the house a little every day. For those who may struggle with this, just start slow. Taking a walk around the block everyday gets the body working and the mind as well. When the body moves, the mind moves along with it. Certain depression will only occur when one hasn’t gotten out of bed all day. Once they get up and moving, the mind perks up right away.


The everyday walk can be increased in length. Soon walking around the neighborhood will be no problem. Stopping in at certain places along the walk will help as well. A nearby coffee shop with a shot of caffeine will help keep the energy up. This may subside the depression for a while. Many people will start to realize that their depression is only brought on by themselves.


Eat the Right Foods


This is obvious here, but eating the right foods helps tremendously. Certain foods, like snack foods and easy to grab soft drinks may heighten the mind for a few minutes, but the crash is the worst. Those with depression will crash hard. A painful feeling may turn into an unbearable feeling. The right foods will benefit one’s mood better. Instead of a chocolate bar, have an apple. Apple’s carry the same amount of energy a candy bar can give someone, but healthier. Physical health isn’t all though, the apple will keep the mind on an even keel and crashing won’t be a problem to be worried about.


Going out to eat as well can change how depression attacks. Fast food only does the body harm. The horrible chemicals will make the body sluggish and the mind slow down. Eating healthier outside the house will keep the mind sharp.


Working Out


Along with all this, working out will keep the mind intact. When one works out many chemicals in the brain are released that pump adrenaline to the whole body, including the mind. Keeping the blood pumping throughout the body will allow one to think clearly and make better choices in life.


Depression can only win if it’s allowed to fester for long periods of time. Taking back control of the body means taking back control of the mind. Once all these are taken into account, the mind and body won’t be able to live without it. It’s an easier, drug-free, way of dealing with mild depression. Treatment for depression doesn’t always have to be digging out the demons. It can be as easy as focusing on the present and learning to live with what one has. The body and mind are elements that can’t be lived without.  



How Body Therapy is Great for Depression

1 Ekim 2016 Cumartesi

Gene therapy offers hope for treatment of sickle cell anaemia

Scientists are finalising plans to use gene therapy to treat one of the world’s most widespread inherited diseases – sickle cell anaemia. The technique could begin trials next year, say researchers.


About 300,000 babies are born globally with sickle cell disease. The condition causes red blood cells to deform, triggering anaemia, pain, organ failure, tissue damage, strokes and heart attacks. In the west, patients now live to their 40s thanks to the availability of blood transfusions and other treatments. But in Africa most still die in childhood.


“We have known exactly what is the cause of sickle cell anaemia for 60 years, but it has been enormously difficult to turn that information into a treatment,” said Prof Stuart Orkin of Harvard Medical School. “There are a million steps between the lab bench and the clinic, it turns out. However, I think we are closer.”


Sickle cell anaemia is triggered by a genetic fault that changes one of the dozens of amino acids that make up haemoglobin, the key constituent of the red blood cells that carry oxygen around our bodies. The mutated haemoglobin undergoes a change in shape and blocks veins.


The condition is carried by symptomless parents and is thought to have arisen in Africa, the Caribbean and other areas as a protection against malaria. However, when two carriers have children there is a one-in-four risk a child will inherit two sickle cell genes, one from each parent, and develop the disease. In Britain a screening service is offered to parents. Nevertheless more than 300 affected children are born every year.


Crucially, not every person with sickle cell disease succumbs to the condition, scientists have found. Some appear to be protected against its ravages. “We have two types of haemoglobin,” explained Orkin. “There is foetal haemoglobin whose production is normally switched off when we are born. Then the standard adult version takes over.”


But in some individuals foetal haemoglobin production is not turned off at birth. “Those individuals are supplied with foetal haemoglobin throughout their lives and for those who also inherit sickle cell anaemia this protects them against the disease by making a substance that can carry oxygen round the bodies,” he said. “We have calculated that you only need to make a small amount of foetal haemoglobin to halt sickle’s symptoms.”


The prospect of boosted foetal haemoglobin levels in patients was helped when it was found that a gene called BCL11A acts as a suppressor of foetal haemoglobin production. “Essentially, it switches off foetal haemoglobin’s manufacture after birth,” said Orkin. “What we aim to do is to stop it doing this. We want to suppress the suppressor and allow foetal haemoglobin to continue to be made in the body.” And crucial to this task was the discovery by Orkin and colleagues that a small piece of the BCL11A gene, called the enhancer, controls foetal haemoglobin expression.


“We can now use gene-editing technologies to cut out that little enhancer so that the BCL11A gene stops shutting down foetal haemoglobin production and allow children with sickle cell disease to start making it in their blood,” added Orkin. “Essentially, we will take bone marrow – where blood cells are made – from a patient, gene-edit it so that those cells produce enhanced levels of foetal haemoglobin, and return them to that patient.”


Orkin said the science had now been worked out. “We hope to begin trials in the near future.” He added that several other centres in the US were gearing up to start gene therapy trials for sickle cell using similar approaches.


David Williams, of the Boston Children’s Cancer and Blood Disorders Center, is using a slightly different technique to boost foetal haemoglobin but also hopes to begin trials next year. “When you knock BCL11A down, you simultaneously increase foetal haemoglobin and repress sickling haemoglobin, which is why we think this is the best approach,” said Williams.


Such treatments were only like to help patients in the west, Orkin acknowledged. “What we need is a pill that will boost foetal haemoglobin in patients, one that is simple to administer,” he said. “That is our ultimate goal, and the lessons we learn from our gene therapy work will help us get there. Once we do that we can then say we have conquered sickle cell.”



Gene therapy offers hope for treatment of sickle cell anaemia

13 Eylül 2016 Salı

What Is Inversion Therapy?

Nowadays, inversion therapy has become one of the most popular and widely used therapy for healing back pain as well as spinal discomforts. It has special health benefits for the practitioner and can provide relief from all sorts of pains magically within a few workouts. Looking for a bit more specific answer of your query What Is Inversion Therapy?


Inversion therapy is equally popular to both who are having severe to mild back pain or other spinal problems and general practitioner. It helps in healing all sorts of pains like back pain, lower back pain, sciatica nerve pain, and other spinal issues. Along with all these, it also improves overall fitness and largely helps in maintaining height.


Let us tell you everything in detail in the following:


What Is Inversion Therapy?


Inversion Therapy is a process of hanging upside down with the help of an inversion table. It uses gravity to heal all sorts of pains, especially back pain and spinal issues by hanging the practitioner upside down. Gravity helps to decompress the compressed spine and muscles in the spinal area.


While inverting on the best inversion table hanging upside down, with the help of gravity the direction of blood circulation in the human body get changed and thus it forces more blood to flow all over the body. Inversion therapy also helps in increasing blood circulation and improving overall body fitness. And it is believed to be a special form of exercise that renders amazing health benefits just like magic.



Benefits of Inversion Therapy:


The health benefits of Inversion Therapy are so much to describe. Along with therapeutic benefits, it renders a number of added health benefits to the users. To be precise, a single therapy is the box of surprising health benefits. Let’s point out some key benefits of inversion therapy in the following:


  • Reduces back pain magically

  • Increases blood circulation

  • Removes body stress

  • Maintains height

  • Corrects bad postures gradually

  • Provides relief from any kind of spinal issues

  • Improves overall fitness

Health Risks of Inversion Therapy:


Along with all these notable health benefits, there is some restriction in practicing this magical therapy. Yes, it has some health risks too. But if you are aware of those health risks, you can surely grab the health benefits of this amazing therapy.


Let’s have a look at the health risks of inversion therapy below:


It is advised by both doctors as well as the inversion therapy experts to avoid this particular form of exercise if the users have any of the following medical issues:


  • Any kind of heart diseases

  • High blood pressure

  • Any kind of eye diseases such as glaucoma

  • Pregnancy is also listed to be at the high risk

At the end, we hope you have gone through the discussion presented above and have got a crystal clear idea about inversion therapy. Now, it is up to you to go forward and get started with inversion therapy. If you have any of the health risks mentioned above, consult your doctor before practicing inversion therapy.


That’s it,


If you have any further queries feel free to contact our fitness experts.


References:


  1. http://sunflower-press.com/benefits-inversion-table-therapy/

  2. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inversion_therapy

  3. http://undergroundhealthreporter.com/inversion-therapy-benefits-for-pain/


What Is Inversion Therapy?