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Month: July, 2010

Flip-Flops: The Official Shoe of Florida

Assorted colorful flip-flops.
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Dr. Remmel has a thing for shoes … or more accurately, he has a thing for people wearing footwear that is bad for their feet and orthopedic structure.  For the most part, I only wear flip-flops, high heals and tennis shoes.  The first two are BAD!  But I know I’m not alone.  I’m sure I won’t get you to stop wearing flip-flops, but maybe you’ll be a little more conscious of the types of flip-flops you purchase.

Flip-flops could be considered the unofficial Florida footwear for both children and adults, but flip-flops can cause serious medical problems.

After the summer fun is gone, issues like tendinitis and stress fractures can remain, so choose your pair carefully.  Soft leather can reduce the potential for blisters, and flip-flops with wider straps and deeper heel forms also help.

 Make sure to inspect for signs of wear and tear, and toss them if you find any.

 Don’t wear flip-flops for long walks, yard work, or sports, as the wrong model offers little if any arch support and could cause an injury.

 If you notice blisters or other signs of irritation, stop wearing your flip-flops and consult a physician.

Posted by Laurie Puckett, Remmel Wellness Center – a full service chiropractic and wellness facility in St. Petersburg, Florida.

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Prevent Diabetes by Drinking Coffee?

A photo of a cup of coffee.
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According to the American Diabetes Association, 24 million people in the U.S. have diabetes – making it the seventh leading cause of death.  But a few foods could actually save you from the debilitating disease.  Read this and pass it on to everyone you know.  As the saying goes, an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure!

From BayNews9:  Brandis Roman, a diabetes patient, is also a new mother.  She knows how difficult it is to care for an infant, and also care for her illness at the same time.  “Everything that I do, I have to think about how it’s going to impact my blood sugar,” said Roman.

Research shows that the right foods may help prevent diabetes, like coffee, cinnamon, and milk.

In a recent study, those who drank four cups of coffee per day cut their diabetes risk by 30 percent.

Cinnamon has shown to control changes in blood sugar levels which play a role in developing type II diabetes.  Try sprinkling a half teaspoon a day on apples, yogurt, or oatmeal.

The calcium, magnesium, and vitamin D in milk can help the body process insulin.  Drinking eight ounces or more per day of the white stuff could lower your diabetes risk by 40 percent.

And if you nap a lot during the day, that could be a sign you’re at risk of diabetes.  Participants in a study who napped four to six times a week were 36 percent more likely to develop type II diabetes.  I could speculate that it is probably because they are eating all the wrong foods (carbs, sugars) and then getting the crash following the consumption of the sugars and carbs, which leads to over-eating, which leads to insulin resistance … You see where I’m going with this?

Talk to your doctor about your health concerns, or see a dietician or nutritionist.  The doctors, weight loss coaches and counselors at Remmel Wellness Center are available to help you address your health concerns, including diabetes.

Posted by Laurie Puckett, Remmel Wellness Center – a full service chiropractic and wellness facility in St. Petersburg, Florida.

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Music in the Brain

This is so cool!!!  A doctor has been mapping brain activity and turning it into music!  Read the following story posted by BayNews9.  I wonder what my brain sounds like?  Hopefully not like jazz music :-)  

For dozens of years, doctors have realized that listening to music can have positive effects on all sorts of patients.

Albert Yost has enjoyed music and entertained with it for more than 50 years.

He believes songs not only live in our brains, but in our toes, fingers, and mouths.

“Inside each of us there’s a symphony going at all times,” said Dan Lloyd, Phd. with Trinity College. “We’re never quiet inside. Basically, I think of the brain as if it were a musical instrument.”

Lloyd is turning brain scans into music in order to get a better idea of what’s going on in the brain.

When brains are scanned, active areas light up and are assigned a different note.

As the intensity of the activity increases, so does the volume of the sound.

“So here we have all the areas of the brain playing together as our subject looks at a flashing checkerboard,” said Lloyd.

Lloyd has created symphonies using the brains of people of all ages, and even those with mental illnesses.

“I think with the brains in schizophrenia, there’s a tendency for things to drift out of synchrony and so it comes out a little jazzier,” said Lloyd.

Researchers said it is possible to use brain music to help diagnose conditions like schizophrenia.

There are thousands of notes possible in each brain, but only a few dozen have been mapped.

Fa la la la la …

Posted by Laurie Puckett, Remmel Wellness Center – a full service chiropractic and wellness facility in St. Petersburg, Florida.

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Poisonous ‘shrooms kill 400 in China

Annie Encounters a Mushroom
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I just couldn’t resist pulling this story.  I could say it is because we are always talking about being healthy, eating right, getting your fruits and vegetables, but I mean, really … any of you who grew up in the 60s, 70s or 80s probably have an idea why I just had to read this story!  It’s probably the same reason why YOU are reading it!  :-)  

Ok, here’s the story:  Every summer during the height of the rainy season, villagers of all ages in a corner of southwestern China would suddenly die of cardiac arrest.

No one knew what caused Yunnan Sudden Death Syndrome, blamed for an estimated 400 deaths in the past three decades.

Now, after a five-year investigation, an elite investigative unit from China’s Center for Disease Control and Prevention believes it has pinpointed the cause: an innocuous-looking small mushroom known as Little White.

The search for the culprit began in 2005 and took investigators to remote villages spread over the rural highlands of Yunnan province, said Robert Fontaine, an epidemiologist with the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

There was “this very obvious clustering of deaths in villages in very short periods of time in the summer,” said Fontaine, who helped in the investigation. “It appears that there was something a little different going on.”

Local health officials had noted the deaths for years. In 2004, they appealed to Beijing for assistance. The government gave the task to the China Field Epidemiology Training Program, a unit of medical investigators at China’s CDC assigned some of the country’s toughest health mysteries.

The medical teams encountered obstacles. Many villagers didn’t speak standard Chinese, instead communicating in their own dialect. Villages were scattered in often remote areas. Rapid burials made it difficult to conduct autopsies. Torrential rain and mudslides hampered travel.

But that first year, investigators were able to narrow down the list of possibilities: most victims had drunk surface water, they had emotional stress and they ate mushrooms.

The investigators zeroed in on mushrooms, because the deaths were closely aligned with the harvesting season. More than 90 percent of the deaths occurred in July or August. By the end of 2005, investigators began issuing warnings to some villages to avoid eating unfamiliar mushrooms.

That was a difficult order to follow. Yunnan province is legendary for its wide variety of wild mushrooms, many of which are exported at high prices. Entire families go out to hunt for them during the summer months.

By 2008, investigators had discovered a relatively unknown mushroom in a number of homes where people had died. The mushroom is not usually sold in the markets, because it’s too small.

“We repeatedly found it at all these sites,” Fontaine said.

A public information campaign to warn against eating the mushrooms has dramatically reduced the number of deaths. Only a handful have been reported in the last couple of years, and none so far this year.

However, the mystery has not yet been definitively solved.

Testing found the mushroom contained some toxins, though not enough to be deadly. Chinese scientists need to isolate the toxin and test whether it triggers cardiac arrests.

Researchers have hypothesized that there is a second agent. Many of the victims showed high levels of barium, a heavy metal in the soil that seeps into mushrooms.

“There is a lot of work left to do,” Fontaine said. “We really need additional lab investigations.”

Problems with poisonous mushrooms are common throughout Asia, said Diderik De Vleeschauwer, a spokesman for the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization regional office in Thailand.

“Normally we expect people to have knowledge of what they can and can’t eat. One would think there is indigenous knowledge available about what they can forage,” he said. “But these are accidents that can happen.”

So the lesson to be learned?  Be sure to know what kind of mushroom you are eating!!!

Posted by Laurie Puckett, Remmel Wellness Center – a full service chiropractic and wellness facility in St. Petersburg, Florida.

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Weight Loss Pill Rejected by FDA

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Sad news for all you fatties out there …. you know who you are … there still isn’t a “quick fix” for you.  Yet another wight loss pill has been rejected because of the risks associated with it.  Hmmm …. maybe popping a pill isn’t the best way to loose weight?

A panel of federal health experts dealt a surprising setback Thursday to a highly anticipated anti-obesity pill from Vivus Inc., saying the drug’s side effects outweigh its ability to help patients lose weight.

The Food and Drug Administration panel voted 10-6 against Vivus’s Qnexa, citing uncertainty about the potential risks that could come with long-term use of the drug. The FDA will consider the panel’s ruling and make its own decision on the drug in coming months.

Panelists unanimously agreed the drug helps patients lose pounds, with most reporting more than 10 percent weight loss. But those benefits were outweighed by a slew of safety concerns that cropped up in company trials, including memory lapses, suicidal thoughts, heart palpitations and birth defects.  Oookkaaayyyy…. sign me up for those side effects!?!?

“Some of these side effects are serious and could be life-threatening and must be weighed against a relatively modest weight loss,” said the panel’s chair, Kenneth Burman of the Washington Hospital Center.

 ”You got the sense that a lot of people had a little bit of hesitancy,” said Eric Coleman, deputy director of the FDA’s metabolism division. “They weren’t strongly against the drug but they had enough concerns to make them lean towards ‘no.’”

Qnexa is a combination of two older drugs: the amphetamine phentermine and topiramate, an anticonvulsant drug sold by Johnson & Johnson as Topamax. According to the company, phentermine helps suppress appetite, while topiramate makes patients feel more satiated.

Vivus representatives told panelists the company’s drug fills an important gap between current treatment options.

Current weight loss drugs on the market such as Roche’s Xenical and Abbott Laboratory’s Meridia offer weight loss in the five percent range. Bariatric surgery can help patients lose 30 to 35 percent, though complications with the operation can be life-threatening.

The quest for a blockbuster weight loss drug has been plagued for decades by safety issues. The most notable was Wyeth’s diet pill-drug combination, fen-phen, which was pulled off the market in 1997 because of links to heart-valve damage and lung problems.

With U.S. obesity rates nearing 35 percent of the adult population, people need to take a good hard look at themselves and what they are doing to their bodies and their health.  The ONLY safe way to lose weight and and keep it off is by changing your lifestyle by changing your relationship with food, drink and exercise.

At the Remmel Wellness Center, we help our patients lose weight in a medically supervised environment using Ideal Protein meal replacement products, along with weight loss coaching, support groups and mental health counceling and a full package of exercise tools – from motivational coaching, to classes and discounted gym memberships.  A weight loss consultation is always complimentary, so call 727-525-1141 today!

Posted by Laurie Puckett, Remmel Wellness Center – a full service chiropractic and wellness facility in St. Petersburg, Florida.

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What Causes Fibromyalgia, Chronic Fatigue Syndrome?

spinal cord.
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What causes Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (CFS) and Fibromyalgia (FMS)?  If I knew the answer to that, I’d be a gazillionaire!  The truth is, nobody really knows what causes these diseases, and I suspect that there probably is more than one cause.

Until definitive research is completed on CFS, FMS and other autoimmune diseases, there are many hypotheses as to the causes behind these diseases. Some FMS researchers are looking at abnormally low levels of the hormone cortisol and its relationship to FMS. Other FMS researchers are studying regulation of the adrenal gland (which makes cortisol) in fibromyalgia.

Some medical researchers believe that a virus (such as Epstein-Barr, the mononucleosisvirus is at the core of these diseases. And while no single virus or cause has been firmly associated with CFS and FMS, one medical journal reported that 78% of the CFS patients studied in one research effort also tested positive for the Epstein-Barr Virus. Anecdotally, many thyroid patients report having had serious bouts of mononucleosis, or recurrent Epstein-Barr virus.

Other researchers believe bacterial infection, stress, an accident (such as an auto accident) or other trauma may chronically activate the immune system. The immune system, which ordinarily returns to normal after successfully fighting an infection, then remains in a hyperactive state.

Others have suggested the development of one autoimmune disorder, such as rheumatoid arthritis or lupus may then precipitate the onset of CFS or FMS.

And certain researchers are looking to autoimmune thyroid disease itself as perhaps the underlying cause of some CFS and FMS symptoms, or perhaps the root cause of the diseases themselves.

In taking a medical history of our patients, we discover that most have more than one autoimmune disease, most have had an accident or trauma, and a history of mono or Epstein-Barr is not unusual.  When a combination of things are at work and the patient’s immune system is kicked into overdrive and autoimmune disease can develop when the immune system isn’t able to shut itself down. 

We treat CFS and FMS patients to get at the root of the problem – based on patient history and clinical experience.   Although there isn’t a one-size fits all protocol, most patients benefit from a combination of detoxification/chelation and NRC therapy.  The detoxification or chelation removes toxins and heavy metals from the body, allowing internal organs to function properly.  When there is an injury, the central nervous system sends signals to the brain that there is injury in the body, stimulating the immune system to heal.  But when the meninges (which is supposed to protect the spinal cord) impinges upon the spinal cord, those same signals are sent to the brain.  But, because there is no “injury” to heal, the signals are never shut down and CFS or FMS develops.  Through use of the NRC technique, we relieve the meningial impingement and reducing the symptoms that make your life miserable. 

Consultations and NRC technique testing to determine whether an individual is a good candidate for the therapy are always complimentary.  To find out more, please call 727-525-1141.

Posted by Laurie Puckett, Remmel Wellness Center – a full service chiropractic and wellness facility in St. Petersburg, Florida.

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Go “Forest Bathing” to Boost Immunity

Taken inside Florida's Myakka State Park
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Is the heat keeping you inside?  Are you feeling rundown or worried about catching a summer cold?  Maybe you need to spend more time outside in nature. 

This time of year, allergies and the promise of air-conditioning tend to drive people indoors.

But for those who can take the heat and cope with the pollen, spending more time in nature might have some surprising health benefits. In a series of studies, scientists found that when people swap their concrete confines for a few hours in more natural surroundings — forests, parks and other places with plenty of trees — they experience increased immune function.

Stress reduction is one factor. But scientists also chalk it up to phytoncides, the airborne chemicals that plants emit to protect them from rotting and insects and which also seem to benefit humans.

One study published in January included data on 280 healthy people in Japan, where visiting nature parks for therapeutic effect has become a popular practice called “Shinrin-yoku,” or “forest bathing.” On one day, some people were instructed to walk through a forest or wooded area for a few hours, while others walked through a city area. On the second day, they traded places. The scientists found that being among plants produced “lower concentrations of cortisol, lower pulse rate, and lower blood pressure,” among other things.

A number of other studies have shown that visiting parks and forests seems to raise levels of white blood cells, including one in 2007 in which men who took two-hour walks in a forest over two days had a 50-percent spike in levels of natural killer cells. And another found an increase in white blood cells that lasted a week in women exposed to phytoncides in forest air.

THE BOTTOM LINE

According to studies, exposure to plants and trees seems to benefit health.  There are so many beautiful, amazing parks in the Tampa Bay area and around the state and country.  I have explored the wetlands, marshes and canopies of Weedon Island, I have camped in Myakka State Park, canoed down the Little Manatee River, layed on the beach at Honeymoon Island and frolicked with river otters at Collier-Seminole State Park.  There are so many other parks – large and small, that offer a wide variety of opportunities, that there really isn’t a good reason to not get out and breathe some fresh air.

Posted by Laurie Puckett, Remmel Wellness Center – a full service chiropractic and wellness facility in St. Petersburg, Florida.

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Who Knew Relaxing Could Be So Stressful!

Stressed out?  You need a vacation.  But even if you go on vacation, are you relaxing, or, are you thinking about work, calling into the office, checking your emails and stressing out about what you are missing at the office?  You are not alone….. but the health benefits of learning how to relax are enormous … so give it a try!

The water’s blue, the waves are lapping. Geez, it’s hot. Do I have enough sunscreen on? Why did I wear this bathing suit? How long have we been here? I wonder what’s happening at the office. Have they finished that project? Where is that cellphone? Wait, don’t tell me there’s no service!

Can’t slow down? Even on vacation? You’ve got plenty of company.

Only 53% of working Americans say they come back feeling rested and rejuvenated after vacation, and 30% say they have trouble coping with work stress while they’re away, according to an Expedia.com survey of 1,530. Some try to cram in so much activity that they come back more exhausted than when they left. Others stay so plugged on BlackBerrys and cellphones that colleagues and clients don’t even suspect they’re away.

“It’s been my experience that an ‘out of office’ response means nothing anymore,” says Edward T. Creagan, a medical oncologist who writes the Mayo Clinic’s stress blog. “We’re driving ourselves wacko with no time to power down.”

Attempting to relax even makes some people sick. Some 3% of the population suffers from “leisure sickness” when they go on vacation. Symptoms include fatigue, muscle pain, nausea and flu-like symptoms, according to a 2002 study in the Netherlands. And a phenomenon of “weekend headaches” accounts for roughly one-third of all migraines and one-sixth of tension headaches.

Faced with a threatening situation, the body’s primitive “fight or flight” mechanism pumps out adrenaline that primes the body for action, raising the heart rate, tensing muscles and slowing digestion. But when the threat is an impending layoff or demanding client, the state of alarm never dissipates, raising the risk for high blood pressure, Type 2 diabetes, chronic pain and a weakened immune system. It can also bring on depression, anxiety and exhaustion.

For some people, the withdrawal of stress can be similar to withdrawing from steroids—including changes in glucose metabolism and dramatic mood swings, says Conor Liston, a psychiatry resident at Weill Medical College in New York City who was the lead investigator of a brain study on stress.

Other people seem to get so addicted to the adrenaline rush from stress that they gravitate to high-pressure jobs and keep piling on new challenges; some subconsciously push deadlines and complicate projects, creating stress unnecessarily.

Put someone like that on a beach for a week, and it’s no wonder they can’t relax. For them, the best vacations involve physical or mental stimulation, anything from hang-gliding to culinary classes.

“I can sit on a beach for, like, 15 minutes, then it’s ‘OK, what’s next?’ ” says Vaughn Payne, a cardiologist in eastern Kentucky who runs four to six miles most weekdays before doing hospital rounds, seeing 30 or more patients and studying for his M.B.A. at night. “He’ll occasionally sit in front of the TV—with his pager on one armrest, his cellphone on the other and his laptop in his lap,” laughs his wife, Debby.

Of course, many people who work hard can disengage when they want to. “The hard worker in the office is dreaming about being on the ski slope. The workaholic is on the ski slope dreaming about being in the office,” says Bryan E. Robinson, author of “Chained to the Desk, a Guidebook for Workaholics.” He says true workaholics are driven less by real workplace demands than by low self-esteem and fear of inadequacy. They bring all those feelings with them on vacation, along with added guilt of being away.

“For a lot of workaholics, work alleviates anxiety, and when you are not working, the anxiety bubbles up,” says Dr. Robinson, who says that he used to pretend to rest—and secretly work instead—while his family went to the beach. “It calmed me down, like a drink calms an alcoholic,” he says. He hit bottom when his partner left him in 1983 and he sought help in therapy and Workaholics Anonymous.

The author of 25 books on psychology and family, Dr. Robinson, professor emeritus at University of North Carolina at Charlotte estimates that about one-quarter of the population could be classified as workaholic, though it comes in varying degrees. One version is the workaholic who is physically on vacation but mentally still at work. “He may be playing catch with his daughter, but his mind is somewhere else. And she can probably tell, even though she’s only 7,” he says.

Some vacationing workers insist they can be “present” when it counts and still stay connected.

“It’s not the worst situation in the world to be lying on a beach, drinking a margarita, keeping up with email,” says Erika Soto Lamb, an executive at public-relations company Ketchum who went to Zihuatanejo, Mexico, with her husband over Memorial Day to celebrate their anniversary. (She left her cellphone behind during their anniversary dinner.) “I’m doing preventative stress so that when I come back on Monday morning, I can get right back into the game instead of having to read a million emails,” she says.

Indeed, many experts think that checking in with the office occasionally can be less stressful than anxiously wondering what’s going on. “Feeling out of control is always stressful,” says Paul J. Rosch, president of the American Institute of Stress. “But do try to make it a limited time—like 9 to 10 a.m. and 5 to 6 p.m.,” says the Mayo Clinic’s Dr. Creagan. “Then say, ‘Regardless of what is happening, I am unplugging that little torture device.’ ”

What is the ideal vacation for someone who needs to relax but has trouble doing so?

Try something new. Learning something in a new place can be more relaxing and refreshing than trying to do nothing. While it’s good to get outside your comfort zone, it’s not necessary to explode out of it. “I don’t want to go bungee jumping,” says Matthew Edlund, a sleep expert in Sarasota, Fla., and author of “The Power of Rest” who says he’d much prefer walking through Berlin or Beijing. “You decide what your level of adventurousness is and do it.”

Have a plan, but be flexible. Completely winging it somewhere can be stressful, so have a rough idea of what you’re going to do, but be willing to change it. “If you find that you’re on a beach and you’re bored out of your mind, get up and do something else,” says Dr. Edlund.

Get physical. Besides releasing endorphins, exercise also burns off excess adrenaline and cortisol. The “flight” can be on the treadmill, after all. If you haven’t been exercising, a vacation can be a good time to start. Even a walk on the beach can be invigorating for a chaise potato. At the other extreme, some people relax by doing marathons or triathlons. But overdoing it be stressful as well.

“We really weren’t meant to sit at a desk 12 hours a day,” says Dr. Edlund, who recommends that vacationers alternate periods of “food, activity and rest.”

Build in a buffer. Don’t work right up until the moment you leave and head back to work right off the plane. If possible, schedule an extra day off before you depart and another when you come back to dive back in slowly.

Manage expectations. Make sure your colleagues and clients know that you’ll be away and checking in only occasionally; tell those back home the kind of matters you want to be bothered about.

Breathe. As New Agey as it sounds, meditating and paced breathing can stimulate the parasympathetic nervous system, which works to balance the surges of adrenaline and cortisol that accompany stress, says Dr. Rosch.

Practice mindfulness: Research suggests that focusing the mind on the present moment can have profound effects. Mostly, it involves observing your surrounds without making judgments. Try observing your own feelings.

“Work on not working,” says Dr. Robinson. “With five minutes to think, ask yourself, ‘Why do I work this way? Why am I rushing?’ Most of us keep judging ourselves all the time, workaholics especially. It’s never enough. Examine those feelings. They might lead you to enlightenment.”

Reprinted from the Wall Street Journal, June 15, 2010.  Posted by Laurie Puckett, Remmel Wellness Center – a full service chiropractic and wellness facility in St. Petersburg, Florida.

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When Food Interacts with Medication

I’ll bet a million dollars that you eat food, because who doesn’t!  And, according to the latest government reports, there is a 50/50 chance that you are on at least one prescription medication.  What you may not realize is that the foods that you eat may adversely interact with the medications you are taking.  Read the following article from the Wall Street Journal to protect yourself from unintended consequences of food/drug interactions.
Americans increasingly view the food they eat as medicine to help lower cholesterol, reduce high blood pressure and control blood sugar. But as with prescribed drugs, the health-improving qualities of foods such as olive oil, nuts and fruit can interact with other medications, causing possible problems.

Pharmacists often warn people not to mix anti-cholesterol drugs known as statins with grapefruit juice. Newer research suggests that other fruit juices, including cranberry and pomegranate, as well as olive oil may also interfere with how statins work in the body. Other laboratory studies show that certain popular teas can block the effect of some medications, including the flu drug Tamiflu. And switching to a low-fat diet, itself a healthy lifestyle change, could reduce the potency of some medications.

Diet can interact with medicine in two main ways. Some foods block the body’s ability to absorb certain medications, effectively reducing the dose a person receives. Other foods enhance the absorption of some drugs, which can lead to a possible overdose.

In general, diet will only interact with medications when a person is consuming exceptionally large portions of certain foods, pharmacology and medical experts say. A few teaspoons of olive oil on pasta typically doesn’t pose any problems, for instance.

Still, as Americans increasingly select foods based on their health benefits, or take supplements with high doses of nutrients, the likelihood of adverse interactions with medications rises. U.S. sales of supplements, natural and organic foods and functional foods, or foods enhanced beyond normal use like calcium-fortified orange juice, grew to $93.5 billion in 2008 from $47.9 billion in 2000, according to Nutrition Business Journal, a nutrition-industry trade publication.

“For every drug there is, there are unintended side effects. You should expect the same thing when taking nutrients at drug levels,” says Patrick Stover, director of the division of nutritional sciences at Cornell University in Ithaca, N.Y.

Other factors also can affect how medicines are absorbed in the body, including a person’s age, weight and gender. Such variations, combined with possible interactions with the food we eat, can increase or reduce the effective dose of a medication by as much as 5- to 10-fold, which are “huge effects,” Dr. Stover says.

Grapefruit is one of the most extensively studied foods for its impact on medication. Compounds in the fruit can increase the potency of statins and other medications to potentially dangerous levels by inhibiting cytochrome P450, a family of enzymes that break down the drug. Research indicates that drinking just one eight-ounce cup of grapefruit juice a day increases the strength of the drug.

Recently, animal and laboratory studies have suggested that other fruits, including pomegranates, oranges (especially those from Seville), cranberries, grapes and black mulberries, could have a similar, although less robust, effect on statins in the body. Pomegranates and cranberries are frequently touted as healthy foods because of their high quantities of antioxidants, which supposedly remove free radicals from the body and slow the onset of disease and aging.

In the lab, some scientists’ work raises similar concern about olive oil and some statins. The oil, a principal part of the Mediterranean diet and believed to lower the risk of heart disease, also appears to contain compounds that inhibit the drug’s breakdown, according to researchers in Spain. The effects of olive oil likely aren’t as strong as that of grapefruit, but more studies are needed to figure out what quantities might actually impact humans, say experts.

John Thor Arnason, a biologist at the University of Ottawa, and his colleague Brian Foster of Health Canada, a government ministry, have investigated the effect on drugs of more than 450 food products, mainly in animal and laboratory studies.

The scientists continue to study potential food-drug interactions, as do other researchers world-wide.

In one recent study, Dr. Arnason’s team examined dozens of different kinds of beers. They found that the “hoppier” or more bitter beers reduced the effect of the cancer drug Tamoxifen, when compared with beers that were less hopped. The study was published this year in the Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry.

Another popular compound, the anti-oxidant resveratrol found in red wine, nuts and dark chocolate, is touted for its anti-aging benefits. But resveratrol in large quantities appears to potentially enhance the potency of drugs, other laboratory studies show.

People, especially older adults taking multiple medications, should tell their doctor about dietary supplements, if they are using high-potency juices and teas and drinking lots of wine, Dr. Arnason says. He says that drugs whose labels contain lots of conditions and warnings about possible interactions with other medications are probably more likely also to interact with foods. If a food-drug interaction is suspected, patients should stop taking the food and talk to their doctor immediately.

In work published this year, Drs. Arnason and Foster showed that various herbs including chai hu, Labrador tea, echinacea and goldenseal, can reduce the potency of Tamiflu. The researchers incubated Tamiflu by itself or along with herbs, together with human liver tissue, which is responsible for processing the medication in the body. They found that the drug was less activated in the presence of the herbs.

The herbs are believed to proffer different health benefits. Labrador tea is thought to benefit the nervous system, Chai Hu to treat common cold and fever, and Echinacea is thought to prevent colds and have anti-tumor benefits. Goldenseal is an anti-microbial and anti-inflammatory product.

The researchers also have studied black tea, which is touted for lowering blood pressure, and found that it appears to inhibit an enzyme responsible for the body’s processing of many drugs. The result, the researchers found, is that consuming large quantities of black tea could potentially increase the potency of a wide range of medications.

Others researchers have investigated spices. In one study, piperine, one of the main components of black pepper, increased the potency of the antihistamine Allegra in rats by two-fold compared with animals that took the medicine alone, according to a report in April’s Journal of Food Sciences.

Much of the research on teas and other foodstuffs—with the exception of grapefruit—haven’t been well-studied in humans, so the exact amount that may cause a harmful effect isn’t yet known, say researchers.

Whether the alcohol from beer or wine affects the processing of other drugs isn’t clear, says Cynthia Kuhn, a professor of pharmacology at Duke University Medical Center. It is dangerous to use alcohol in combination with sedating drugs like antihistamines, or narcotic pain medicines, because of the additive effect in the brain.

But despite strong warnings on some other drug labels that alcohol can interact in the liver to inhibit metabolism of other medications, the evidence “is not strong,” says Dr. Kuhn. Alcohol is mainly metabolized by an enzyme called alcohol dehydrogenase, which “has nothing to do with the metabolism of most drugs,” she says.

Some drugs, like dilantin, an epilepsy medication, appear to be affected by the amount of fat in the diet, according to a 2004 study.

Such medicines are dissolved only in fats and could therefore become less effective by a significant reduction in fat consumption.

Experts suggest that patients considering major dietary changes, such as switching to a much lower fat diet from a high-fat one, should discuss the move with their doctor.

There is still much that is unknown in food-drug interactions, but the recommendation here is to be aware of side effects or complications that may arise, and to use common sense in the consumption of foods that may interact with your medications.  As Hippocrates said more than 2,500 years ago, “Let food be thy medicine.”  Perhaps, then, the answer is better food choices and less medication?  Discuss these options with your physician.

Posted by Laurie Puckett, Remmel Wellness Center – a full service chiropractic and wellness facility in St. Petersburg, Florida.

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The Power of Gentle Reminder

56/365 morning run
Image by kharied (vacation!!) via Flickr

I hear excuses all the time as to why people don’t exercise.  It all boils down to this:  a lack of motivation.  Getting started in any new routine can be difficult.  Maintaining that routine so that it becomes habit is just as hard.  What just about every person on the face of the planet needs is some external accountability and motivation… a gentle nudge or reminder.  This article from the Wall Street Journal details the results of a study done by Stanford University on the effectiveness of that reminder.  Read the following and then decide if the woman in the story sounds like you.

Unable to push herself to exercise, Ruthanne Lowe joined a research study aimed at motivating the sedentary with a surprisingly simple technique—an occasional telephone reminder.

“It really did work,” says Ms. Lowe, a 66-year-old housewife in San Jose, Calif. Three years after the study ended, she says, “I’m doing more exercise than I ever did in my life.”

The study, conducted by Stanford University, belongs to a growing body of research showing that small amounts of social support, ranging from friends who encourage each other by email to occasional meetings with a fitness counselor, can produce large and lasting gains against one of America’s biggest health problems—physical inactivity. Only 48% of Americans say they meet the federal recommendation for exercising half an hour most days of the week, and the actual percentage is believed to be much lower. Exercise researchers estimate that nearly all sedentary people at one time or another have resolved and failed to maintain exercise programs.

In the Stanford study, 218 people were divided into three groups. After an introductory session, during which Ms. Lowe established a goal of walking half an hour most days of the week, a Stanford health educator called her and other members of her group every three weeks, on average, for a year to ask about their compliance and to cheer them on. A second group of participants received calls not from humans but from a computer programmed to make similar inquiries.

The caller, whether human or computer, asked the participants to recite the amount of exercise they performed during the past week. Participants were then congratulated on any exercise performed, and asked how the level might be increased in the week ahead. When lapses occurred, as they invariably did because of illness, travel or unforeseeable events, the goal was to impress upon participants the importance of resuming the workout as soon as possible. All questions were designed to encourage rather than to scold.

After 12 months, participants receiving calls from a live person were exercising, as a mean, about 178 minutes a week, above government recommendations for 150 minutes a week. That represented a 78% jump from about 100 minutes a week at the start of the study. Exercise levels for the group receiving computerized calls doubled to 157 minutes a week. A control group of participants, who received no phone calls, exercised 118 minutes a week, up 28% from the study’s start. “When you knew you were going to have to report back on what you had done, it motivated you,” says Ms. Lowe.

The researchers checked in with participants after 18 months and found that their exercise patterns had changed little from the 12-month level. But the study didn’t monitor participants’ beyond that.

Some studies by other researchers have suggested that after eight weeks of regular exercising many people can settle into a long-term habit of working out.

Abby King, a Stanford professor of medicine and health research and policy who conducted this study, published in 2007 in the journal Health Psychology, and other similar studies, says people trying to change unhealthy behaviors generally need something more than willpower. “Whether it’s smoking or alcohol use or physical inactivity, social support helps prevent against relapse,” says Dr. King. But the support doesn’t have to be constant. “A light touch can have a lasting effect,” she says.

Even many of the nation’s most committed exercisers have trouble doing it on their own. At 73, for instance, Marty Mennan is an elite age-group swimmer who strokes across the pool several miles a week, a habit dating back to his years as a competitive college swimmer. But his regimen depends on him belonging to a master’s swim group that provides social support. “From age 55 to 65, I really didn’t exercise at all, because my master’s group had disbanded,” says Mr. Mennan, a retired school teacher in Columbus, Ind., who now drives 40 miles to Indianapolis several times a week to swim with a group.

Mr. Mennan belongs to the 35% to 40% of Americans who prefer to work out in groups. Like alcoholics who can stay sober only with the help of 12-step meetings, these athletes owe their high levels of fitness to running, cycling or swimming clubs.

But surveys show that about 60% of Americans prefer working out alone, especially people who have reached middle age and older who may socialize less frequently in groups. Many lone runners say they come up with solutions to personal and professional problems while exercising. And they often resent the constraints of working out according to somebody else’s schedule. “I’m very gregarious and extroverted, yet I don’t want my exercise schedule hooked into somebody else’s,” says Rita Horiguchi, a 64-year-old self-described former couch potato who with the help of Stanford University learned to work out on her own.

The research coming out of Stanford and other universities essentially calls for such people to join a group or program while continuing to exercise on their own. A study due to be published soon in the International Journal of Sport and Exercise Psychology, found that two group-counseling sessions, conducted over a three-month period, produced after three months a quadrupling of exercise levels and an even greater jump at nine months, long after the intervention had ended. By contrast, the exercise level of a control group rose during the study period but at nine months had returned to near-baseline levels. The study involved 119 participants with an average age in the mid 50s.

“This study demonstrated that group dynamics strategies can be [effective] when participants are away from the group or even once the group ceases to exist,” writes lead author Paul A. Estabrooks, a professor of exercise science at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University.

Dr. King, of Stanford, says that in setting up her studies she advertises for people who are physically inactive. By contrast, she says, ads for health clubs and personal trainers tend to feature photographs of young and buff clients, a marketing tactic that can make the sedentary feel marginalized. “The sedentary are a silent majority who are bombarded by images of active people,” says Dr. King. She says her advertisements for “couch potatoes” alleviate participant concerns about feeling inadequate.

Dr. King’s studies have found that telephone interventions of nearly every kind increase the exercise levels of previously sedentary people. One limitation is that the studies by definition attract people who are eager to change. Even so, participants who receive phone calls as infrequently as once a month have consistently boosted their exercise levels above control groups receiving no such calls, she says.

Despite the popular notion that Americans divide cleanly into the active and the sedentary, most people spend time in both camps. For weeks at a time, Dr. King says she sometimes joins the ranks of the sedentary. By nature a solitary exerciser, she says that when the going gets tough, “I join a small class.”

Some gyms have begun to incorporate the lessons of exercise-adherence research. The YMCA in Chicago recently conducted a study in which in it called members to monitor their success at reaching workout goals. If a member falls short one week, the caller would ask why, then gently prod the member to think of a way that a missed session of exercise could have been made up. “The idea is not to give them the answers, but to encourage them to solve their own exercise problems,” says Mary Ganzel, a YMCA exercise expert who led the study.

In a growing number of states, health officials are sponsoring exercise programs that enable residents to join teams while working out on their own. An annual program called Walk Kansas, for instance, divides tens of thousands of participants into teams of six, with each team expected to walk the width of Kansas, about 430 miles, in eight weeks. Team members walk on their own but report their weekly mileage to each other. An academic study of the Kansas program, which just concluded its ninth year, has found that participants continue exercising far above their original levels long past the end of the contest.

“You don’t want to let your team members down,” says Angel Patterson-Tetuan, a registered nurse who recently completed Walk Kansas for her second consecutive year. She credits the program with helping her lose 40 pounds and develop a year-round exercise regime.

“I used to be able to tell you what was on television every night,” says Mrs. Patterson-Tetuan, a 42-year-old mother of three. “Now I have no idea. I’m up and moving, and so are my children.”

If you need a little motivation, partner up with a friend, neighbor or family member with similar goals to partner up with you.  You don’t need to actually exercise together if you prefer to exercise along (like I do), but it is nice to have that accountability.  If you don’t have anyone you trust to keep you going in a positive, supportive manner, Remmel Wellness Center offers motivational exercise coaching through individual weekly phone calls for only $15 a month.  Having a professional help you through the inevitable ups and downs can make all the difference in establishing a habit that will last a lifetime.

Posted by Laurie Puckett, Remmel Wellness Center – a full service chiropractic and wellness facility in St. Petersburg, Florida.

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