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Can Chiropractic Help Chronic Bronchitis and Emphysemia?

February 14, 2012 | Filed under: General Interest

Studies show Chiropractic improves quality of life and decreases asthma symptoms in young folks by 34%. What if that was true for older individuals with breathing issues?

A study, published in the journal J.M.P.T., found “preliminary evidence that chiropractic adjustments may have the potential to benefit lung function in patients with COPD who are older than 65 years.”

According to PubMed Health:
“Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is one of the most common lung diseases. It makes it difficult to breathe.  There are two main forms of COPD:

Chronic bronchitis, which involves a long-term cough with mucus and Emphysema which invlves destructions of the lungs over time. Most people with COPD have a combination of both conditions.”

“These are exciting finding because COPD has no cure, and it seems chiropractic can safely alleviate suffering for this large group of individuals,” says Dr. Cohen of ProActive Chiropractic in the Financial District of San Francisco. Dr. Cohen has had great success helping children with asthma through a combination of chiropractic adjustments and nutrition. He is watching this growing body of research as it unfolds so if you know anyone suffering from asthma or COPD looking for non-medical alleviation of symptoms, contact ProActive Chiropractic for a risk-free consultation.

That’s Gross, But I Love It! A Visual Reason to Eat Real Food, Not Processed Food. “Mouth to Anus” Video Showing How Your Body Processes Food

February 13, 2012 | Filed under: Nutrition,Video

During the Vitality Voyage Cleanse/Detox we discuss nutrition including how processed foods affect on the bod differently from fresh whole foods. I have also posted previously about how the color in processed foods can contribute to ADHD.

This video illustrating the contrast really drives the point home. Enjoy:

TEDxManhattan 2011 Fellow Stefani Bardin created a video that was shown at TEDxManhattan about her latest “smartpill” project on processed and unprocessed food.

Stefani is producing a body of work that explores the influence of corporate culture and industrial food production on our food system. These investigations take the form of single and multi-channel videos and immersive and interactive installations. Her current project is working with gastroenterologist Dr. Braden Kuo at Harvard University where they just completed the first ever clinical study to use the M2A™ and SmartPill devices to look at how the human body responds to processed versus whole foods. She is an Honorary Resident at Eyebeam Art +Technology Center in New York and teaches in the School of Art, Media and Technology at Parsons The New School for Design and in the Food Studies Program at The New School for Public Engagement.

Be Efficent if Your Eating Flax, Go Ground!

February 10, 2012 | Filed under: General Interest

It’s common to see crackers, breads and energy bars with whole flaxseeds. This is a perfect example of the food industry focusing on “health words”, in this case flax, rather than what is actually good for you.

Don’t take my word for it…

Does ground flaxseed have more health benefits than whole flaxseed?

from Katherine Zeratsky, R.D., L.D. at mayoclinic.com

Most nutrition experts recommend ground flaxseed because your body is better able to digest it. Whole flaxseed may pass through your intestine undigested, which means you won’t get all the health benefits.

Flaxseed is high in fiber, omega-3 fatty acids and phytochemicals called lignans. Flaxseed is commonly used as a laxative (to improve digestive health or relieve constipation). Both flaxseed and flaxseed oil have been used to help reduce total blood cholesterol and low-density lipoprotein (LDL, or “bad”) cholesterol levels and, as a result, may help reduce the risk of heart disease. Although flaxseed oil also contains omega-3 fatty acids, it doesn’t have the beneficial fiber that the seeds have.

Final thought from Dr. Cohen: If you eat fish, I recommend an omega-3 fish oil supplement over flax because our body can use it more efficiently.

METAGENICS EPA-DHA 720 - 120 SOFTGELS

NE Patriots and NY Giants: The Essential Role of Chiropractic Care to Super Bowl XLVI

February 3, 2012 | Filed under: Dr Cohen,General Interest,Sports

CARMICHAEL, Calif.–(BUSINESS WIRE)–As the New England Patriots and New York Giants prepare to play on the biggest stage of all for football fans – the XLVI Super Bowl, February 5, 2012, Indianapolis, Ind. — the Foundation for Chiropractic Progress, a not-for-profit organization dedicated to raising awareness about the value of chiropractic care, points to the role of the team Doctors of Chiropractic (DCs) in optimizing functionality, endurance and overall conditioning. Dr. Michael Miller of the Patriots and Dr. Robert DeStefano of the Giants explain that chiropractic is fundamental to the consequences of jarring impacts, enhancing body mechanics and joint motion while improving structural balance vital to preventing and addressing many common injuries.

“With the exception of 24/7 availability, preparing for Super Bowl is no different than the regular season. As injuries present themselves, we work systematically to provide the athlete with the care needed. In the end, we hope for quick recovery and high-level performance.”

“Professional athletes rely greatly on the coordinated efforts of the entire healthcare team, comprised of athletic trainers, rehabilitation specialists, physical therapists, orthopedists and chiropractors,” says Dr. DeStefano. “With the exception of 24/7 availability, preparing for Super Bowl is no different than the regular season. As injuries present themselves, we work systematically to provide the athlete with the care needed. In the end, we hope for quick recovery and high-level performance.”

Dr. Miller, who notes that the Patriots have dedicated their season and championship wins to Myra Kraft, the late wife of the team’s owner Robert Kraft, adds, “Most of our players will get adjusted prior to games to adequately prepare their bodies for battle. Several times during the playoffs, incidents occurred that required chiropractic care and, subsequent to sideline treatment, players were able to return to action the following play. We expect to have the same efficiency going into and during the Super Bowl.”

Viewed by both teams as a valuable healthcare component, chiropractic care is commonly used to address neuromusculoskeletal strain injuries, including neck pain, low back pain, strains to the hamstring and quadriceps, and certain whiplash injuries. Additionally, it provides treatment for other extremity problems, such as temporomandibular joint dysfunction (TMJ), carpal and tarsal tunnel misalignments, and shoulder, elbow, knee and ankle tribulations.

Although it’s a shame the 49ers will not be be representing San Francisco in this Superbowl, the people of San Francisco can get the same level of care that the professionals do at ProActive Chiropractic. Dr. Andrew Cohen has the training and skill set to provide the highest quality chiropractic care whether you are an elite athletes or weekend warrior from the Financial District location.

Just Give Me My Flippin Hit, of Sugar That Is! Sugar is the Same as Tobacco?

| Filed under: General Interest,Nutrition

ProActive Chiropractic offers quarterly doctor-lead nutrition classes in conjunction with a comprehensive elimination and provocation detox. This cleanse temporarily cuts out inflammatory foods, including sugar (of which the average American consumes 22.2 teaspoons a day).  Now University of California San Francisco scientists confront the toxicity of sugar and our collective addiction head on asserting it’s as damaging and dangerous as alcohol and tobacco.

Paul Chinn / The Chronicle

Olya Dalrymple scoops Nutella-flavored ice cream for a customer at iScream in Berkeley, where sugar is plentiful.

Thursday, February 2, 2012

Like alcohol and tobacco, sugar is a toxic, addictive substance that should be highly regulated with taxes, laws on where and to whom it can be advertised, and even age-restricted sales, says a team of UCSF scientists.

In a paper published in Nature on Wednesday, they argue that increased global consumption of sugar is primarily responsible for a whole range of chronic diseases that are reaching epidemic levels around the world.

Sugar is so heavily entrenched in the food culture in the United States and other countries that getting people to kick the habit will require much more than simple education and awareness campaigns, the UCSF scientists said.

It’s going to require public policy that gently guides people toward healthier choices and uses brute force to remove sugar from so many of the processed foods we eat every day, said Dr. Robert Lustig, a pediatric endocrinologist at UCSF.

“The only method for dealing with this is a public health intervention,” Lustig said in an interview. “Everyone talks about personal responsibility, and that won’t work here, as it won’t for any addictive substance. These are things that have to be done at a governmental level, and government has to get off its ass.”

In response to the study, the food and beverage industries said in statements that sugar cannot be blamed for high rates of chronic disease in the United States and elsewhere.

Comparing sugar to alcohol and tobacco is “simply without scientific merit,” the American Beverage Association said. “There is no evidence that focusing solely on reducing sugar intake would have any meaningful public health impact.”

Altering biochemistry

Lustig has written and talked extensively about the role he believes sugar has played in driving up rates of chronic illness such as heart disease and diabetes. Excessive sugar, he argues, alters people’s biochemistry, making them more vulnerable to metabolic conditions that lead to illness, while at the same time making people crave sweets even more.

It’s sugar, not obesity, that is the real health threat, Lustig and his co-authors – public health experts Laura Schmidt and Claire Brindis – say in their paper. They note that studies show 20 percent of obese people have normal metabolism and no ill health effects resulting from their weight, while 40 percent of normal-weight people have metabolic problems that can lead to diabetes and heart disease. They contend that sugar consumption is the cause.

In other words, not everyone gains a lot of weight from over-indulging in sugar, but a large proportion of the U.S. population is eating enough of it that it’s having devastating health effects, they say.

“The gestalt shift is maybe obesity is just a marker for the rise in chronic disease worldwide, and in fact metabolic syndrome, caused by excessive sugar consumption, is the real culprit,” said Schmidt, a health policy professor who focuses on alcohol and addiction research.

22 teaspoons a day

Americans eat and drink roughly 22 teaspoons of sugar every day – triple what they consumed three decades ago – and most people aren’t even aware of the various ways sugars sneak into their diets, often via breads and cereals and processed foods. Terms that identify sugars on labels include sucrose, glucose, fructose, maltose, hydrolysed starch and invert sugar, corn syrup and honey.

Ultimately, getting those sugars out of the American food culture is going to require a massive shift in how foods and beverages are made in the United States, the authors say. In the paper, they say that the Food and Drug Administration needs to remove sugar from the list of foods “generally regarded as safe,” meaning they can be used in unlimited quantities.

But the food and beverage industries have repeatedly denied that sugar is the main villain behind rising rates of obesity, or the increases in diabetes and heart disease. Instead, industry representatives say that a complex cultural shift – toward a more inactive lifestyle and increased calories overall – is to blame.

And not all scientists agree that sugar should shoulder the entire burden for the chronic diseases afflicting modern Americans.

“When you get into this argument about sugar in the diet, you also have to look at the type of food that has a high sugar content,” said Jo Ann Hattner, a San Francisco registered dietitian who teaches nutrition courses at Stanford. “Those foods have few nutrients and little fiber, and that’s not good for you. So is it sugar itself that’s harmful?”

Good advice: Eat less

That said, Hattner added, there’s no doubt that people in general consume too much sugar and that everyone could benefit from eating less – and especially looking out for “hidden” sugars in their diets. Those sugars are often found in processed foods like sodas, cereals and breads. Even cookies contain much more sugar than they did a decade or two ago, nutritionists say.

But while individuals certainly can make small changes to their diets to eat more nutritiously, that alone is not going to effect major public health improvements, Lustig and his co-authors said.

In their paper, they argue for taxes on heavily sweetened foods and beverages, restricting advertising to children and teenagers, and removing sugar-ladened products from schools, or even from being sold near schools. They suggest banning the sale of sugary beverages to children.

Schmidt noted that those policies could nudge people toward healthier choices – but only if, at the same time, healthier choices are made widely available. Such policies have worked in reducing alcohol consumption and smoking rates, she said. There’s no reason they can’t work with sugar too.

Lustig said he realizes that there will likely be heavy resistance to the idea of largely removing sugar from American diets – and resistance not just from the food and beverage industries, but from the public at large.

“Everybody yells, ‘Nanny state, this guy is trying to control our food,’ ” Lustig said. “But it’s already being controlled. It limits consumer choice when so much of our food is controlled by these industries. I’m actually trying to undo the nanny state.”

E-mail Erin Allday at eallday@sfchronicle.com.

http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2012/02/02/MN891N1PQS.DTL

This article appeared on page A – 1 of the San Francisco Chronicle

Is Sugar So Bad?

February 2, 2012 | Filed under: Brain Health,General Interest,Heart Health,Kids,Nutrition,Video

This is an must watch video on sugar.

Robert H. Lustig, MD, UC San Francisco Professor of Pediatrics in the Division of Endocrinology, explores the damage caused by sugary foods. He argues that fructose (too much) and fiber (not enough) appear to be cornerstones of the obesity epidemic through their effects on insulin.