In Addition to Acupuncture And Chiropractic, Balanced Choices Pave the Way to Good Health and Longevity

Dr. Jamie Phillips

Last week I saw an article on sciencedaily.com detailing a study performed on aged mice induced to develop symptoms of Alzheimer’s disease and the benefits of caffeine in reversing memory loss. The article began with the suggestion that “Coffee drinkers may have another reason to pour that extra cup.”  It continued by discussing back-to-back studies published online July 6 in the Journal of Alzheimer’s Disease that proved that caffeine significantly decreased abnormal levels of the protein linked to Alzheimer’s disease, both in the brains and in the blood of mice that had developed symptoms of the disease.

However, before you opt to add another cuppa to your daily routine, let me, Dr. Jamie Phillips elaborate by saying that also on the website, under “Related Stories,” were at least two articles reporting on studies that demonstrated the not-so-healthy effects of caffeine, “Morning Jolt of Caffeine May Mask Serious Sleep Problems,” and “Coffee Consumption Linked To Increased Risk Of Heart Attack For Persons With Certain Gene Variation.”

Nearly any point of view, it seems to me, especially when it has to do with age-related health issues, can be affirmed, or at least given credence, by a number of specific studies. The “yin-yang” of caffeine benefits-deficits certainly aren’t, by any means, the only ones. Even so, it did get me to pondering about the likelihood that there will not ever be just “one thing” that will absolutely help we, humans, to live longer, healthier lives. Humans are dynamic, biological creatures. We aren’t bred in a cage! We are actively engaged in life. And, furthermore, though Alzheimer’s disease is likely on the rise, obviously we, cage-free humans, have not been “bred to develop symptoms of Alzheimer’s disease,” therefore caffeine isn’t absolutely the “one thing” that is going to prevent or reverse it.

Our body is an exquisite, involved system that is based on homeostasis, i.e, balance. Consequently good health is cultivated by a healthy, balanced attitude towards living, instead of our jumping on the bandwagon of the latest health study and “doing” or “overdoing” one particular thing in the hope that it will reverse all of the other excessive and unwholesome things we do to our bodies.

I believe, as a doctor of chiropractic in Santa Barbara, that every moment of the day we have an opportunity to make healthy choices for our body, to decide what will assist us to live longer, healthier lives. We know what truly “feels” life enriching and what doesn’t when it comes to what is good for us. So, I just wanted to offer a little something for you to keep in mind the next time you consider having that extra cup of coffee or second glass of red wine. There is no “one thing” that will do “everything” for your good health.

Dr. Jamie Phillips
601 E. Arrellaga St. #201
Santa Barbara, CA, 93103
http://www.santabarbarachiropractic.org

Technorati Tags: , , , , , , ,

Treating Arthritis with Bee Venom

via Current Arthritis News and Research by awesome on 9/18/09

Bees have obviously been around for a long time. My knowledge of bees was that they produced honey, which I like, and give stings, which I don’t. But it turns out that even the stings have beneficial properties.

There is a growing number of people that practice apitherapy, the use of beehive products, which includes honey, pollen, propolis, royal jelly and bee venom. Apitherapy has been around for a long time. In fact, Hippocrates, the Greek physician and philosopher, used bee venom to treat joint pain and swelling. But it is not just the holistic practitioners that use bee venom for treatment of pain and inflammation but those who practice conventional medicine have also been exploring the use of bee venom for treating a wide variety of conditions including rheumatoid arthritis (RA), osteoarthritis, chronic back pain, carpal tunnel syndrome and tendonitis.

Honeybee venom contains 40 ingredients, at least 18 of which reduce pain and inflammation. These include mellitin, an anti-inflammatory agent which is one hundred times stronger than cortisone, adolapin, which is both anti-inflammatory and pain-blocking, dopamine and seratonin. It is believed that the combination of substances in bee venom causes the release of natural healing compounds in the body.

A study conducted by researchers in South Korea published in late 2004 delved into the contribution of mellitin. They found that mellitin inhibited the release of inflammatory genes that are involved in immune reactions. They concluded that “The potency of melittin in the inhibition of the inflammatory response may be of great benefit in degenerative and inflammatory diseases such as RA”.

Traditionally, bee venom was administered with live bees. For many people, the treatment, or the thought of getting stung, was a hindrance to trying this therapy. Manyapitherapy patients, however, find that the relief from their chronic pain far outweighs the discomfort from stings. Some of these patients endure up to 80 bee stings a day, although for most three to four stings, three times a week is effective. There are also injectable forms of venom, as well as creams and ointments.

Here are a couple of good resources: Bees Don’t Get Arthritis and The Curative Properties of Honey Bee Venom.

Originally posted 2007-10-30 12:43:03. Republished by Old Post Promoter

Social Bookmarks
Add to BlinkList Add to Del.icio.us Add to digg Add to Facebook Add to Google Bookmarks Add to Netvouz Add to Stumble Upon <a href=”http://www.squidoo.com/lensmaster/bookmark?http://4-arthritis-info.com/treating-arthritis-with-bee-venom/” title=”Add to Squidoo” rel=”nofollow”>Add to Squidoo Add to Spurl Add to Technorati Add to Yahoo My Web
Hide Sites

Related posts:

  1. Treating Rheumatoid Arthritis with Chinese Ants Chinese ants have been used for centuries in China as…

Posted via email from healthandfitnessnews’s posterous

Eating healthy on the cheap

via Integrative Nutrition Blog by Joshua Rosenthal on 9/9/09


We’re all cutting corners these days and finding ways to make our dollar go further. That might mean eliminating lavish items and activities, and even paring down the basic necessities. While some of us are tightening our wallets when it comes to spending, many are expanding their waistlines by turning to inexpensive, low-quality food. According to Slate, fast food giant McDonald’s is making a killing off the nation’s recession, with sales in 2008 surpassing the previous 2 years. They opened nearly 600 additional stores in 2008.

Many people have the perception that eating healthy is expensive and in fact, a luxury. We maintain that buying wholesome food is possible, even if your family is sticking to a tight budget. The truth is, buying processed foods and eating poorly can lead to a variety of diseases, including diabetes, high blood pressure and obesity. Choosing fresh, healthy foods can improve your diet, quality of life and also prevent food-related illnesses, saving you costly bills at the doctor’s office.  

With just a little preparation and grocery list in-hand, you can make healthy shopping an affordable and achievable goal.  Check out graduate Michelle Pfennighaus’ blog, where she shares some of her penny-pinching tips for eating healthy food on a budget.

1. Cut back on animal products
2. Eat more beans and whole grains
3. Learn to adore the bulk aisle, buy only what you need
4. Drink water, cut back on bottled beverages
5. Eliminate prepared/processed food
6. Use what you have already, even if it means changing a recipe a little.
7. Plan, plan, plan. Don’t put it in your cart without knowing what you’re going to do with it.

Finally, be creative with your shopping and meal planning and have fun!

Posted via email from healthandfitnessnews’s posterous

Eating healthy on the cheap

via Integrative Nutrition Blog by Joshua Rosenthal on 9/9/09


We’re all cutting corners these days and finding ways to make our dollar go further. That might mean eliminating lavish items and activities, and even paring down the basic necessities. While some of us are tightening our wallets when it comes to spending, many are expanding their waistlines by turning to inexpensive, low-quality food. According to Slate, fast food giant McDonald’s is making a killing off the nation’s recession, with sales in 2008 surpassing the previous 2 years. They opened nearly 600 additional stores in 2008.

Many people have the perception that eating healthy is expensive and in fact, a luxury. We maintain that buying wholesome food is possible, even if your family is sticking to a tight budget. The truth is, buying processed foods and eating poorly can lead to a variety of diseases, including diabetes, high blood pressure and obesity. Choosing fresh, healthy foods can improve your diet, quality of life and also prevent food-related illnesses, saving you costly bills at the doctor’s office.  

With just a little preparation and grocery list in-hand, you can make healthy shopping an affordable and achievable goal.  Check out graduate Michelle Pfennighaus’ blog, where she shares some of her penny-pinching tips for eating healthy food on a budget.

1. Cut back on animal products
2. Eat more beans and whole grains
3. Learn to adore the bulk aisle, buy only what you need
4. Drink water, cut back on bottled beverages
5. Eliminate prepared/processed food
6. Use what you have already, even if it means changing a recipe a little.
7. Plan, plan, plan. Don’t put it in your cart without knowing what you’re going to do with it.

Finally, be creative with your shopping and meal planning and have fun!

Posted via email from healthandfitnessnews’s posterous

The Pros of Protein

You’re starving. Your stomach is screaming with hunger, demanding that you fill its emptiness with food. Unable to ignore the strengthening pangs, you examine the contents of your kitchen and to your horror, find that there’s not much. Your options are limited to pretzels, last night’s onion rings or some …

Posted via email from healthandfitnessnews’s posterous

The Desire for Peace

We would probably all agree that the world is noisier now than it has ever been, in certain places reaching nearly intolerable decibels.  War, bombs, and explosions have escalated around the world. The intense and angry shouts of conflicting political and religious extremists merge into inarticulate racket. Everything is faster, noisier, and more “extreme.” Not only our ears are being assaulted, but our eyes as well. Once merely unsightly billboards are now electronic and light the night with promotions. Uninvited gimmicks sail across our computer monitors like phantoms, and then stop, impeding our ability to read more valued words beneath them. In addition, what we see is horrifying. Acts of violence and catastrophic events that have caused pain and suffering are aired over and over again, in full color, on the news. Where can peace be found in these times? How can we get there from here? Peace can be found within each of us, at the still, quiet core of our being. And we can find it through meditation.

By closing our eyes and turning away from the world, we find what seemed impossible and elusive, but was always there…peace. As we slow the pace of our breathing and allow our body to let go of stress and anxiety… we find peace. Through the slowing of the crazy pace of our thoughts, until they gently drift, like falling leaves, and settle into quietness…we find peace.

Every cell, fiber, and tissue of our body is clarified by this type of meditation Therefore, it can be healing. The babble of our mind ceases with the type of meditation. In this way, it can be revealing.

The problems of body and mind evaporate when we meditate in this way, and they frequently do not come back when we open our eyes and face the world again. The peace that we have embodied within becomes the peace of our actions in the world.

Now, maybe more than ever before, we, the people, need to meditate — to heal ourselves and, in that way, to heal the world.

Technorati Tags: , , ,