Friday, November 18, 2011

We learn as we grow...

Strange, I began this blog a long time ago and was erratic at best. Then I got a web site with a blog and have been blogging there, I even moved some of my old posts from here to there for reference. The strange thing is I have never moved anything from there to here! And never said where I went.

If you found this through some of my old blogs, find me now at www.modalitieswellness.com

Thanks,
Sheila

CHRISTMAS AROMATHERAPY

This is my shortest post ever – just a heads up really –

I am offering some specially priced packages of my aromatherapy products for Christmas – come see what’s on offer….



Saturday, December 5, 2009

Observing surgery

Earlier this week I had the unique opportunity of observing some veterinary surgery. I am sure many of you are trying to figure out what use this would serve for a Massage Therapist. After all, what does a dog being spayed have to do with massage therapy? Well, quite a bit.

Though I am hoping to observe some more orthopaedic surgeries (i.e knee repairs) being able to observe any surgery was an interesting exercise. When it comes down to it the structure of mammals (the hairy, live young bearing, nursing creatures of the planet) is very much similar. The skeleton is made up of almost exactly the same bones that interact in very much similar ways through the action of very similar muscles. Four-legged mammals to have some differences in how the limbs interact with the torso and the proportions of the bones and muscles are different, but there is more the same than different.

In a general sense seeing the basic process of how you cut into a living being was educational. An opportunity to see all the layers of fascia and tissue that I have learned were there and what they actually look like. Seeing tissue not in a drawing or a film of preserved tissue, but “in vivo” - “in life” - is quite different.

My first surprise though came in seeing how limp the animals were when they are brought, already anaesthetized to the table. For everyone who has seen a truly ASLEEP baby when all the limbs splay out and you are are sure that even swinging by the ankles would not disturb them are less limp than this. Everything is simply floppy. The next surprise was how quickly admission into the body is gained, and how little blood there actually is. The third, and perhaps largest surprise, came once the outer tissue had been cut through and I realized how truly separate the outer layers of skin, fascia and muscle were from all the organs lying underneath. Everything could simply be lifted up so the vet could see around the abdomen, and there was no blood in there. Well, there was blood, but it was all tidily where it belonged, in the blood vessels and the tissue.

All I saw that day were spays, the removal of the ovaries and uterus of young female dogs. The surgeries were quick and even with the poking, pulling, tying, cutting, and a bit of tearing too, there was very little blood and the incisions were virtually invisible. Within about a half hour the dogs were rousing and most did not seem particularly troubled. Though a bit drowsy, only one whimpered a bit, but then she managed to get close to one of the other dogs and she was calm again. None seemed to be in great pain or distress. Having experienced a few surgeries of my own I must say I was not so sanguine after. Apparently our pets are more stoic than ourselves.

From this experience I am taking away an new wonder with the body and the its structure. The amazing way in which all its parts work together with so little muss and fuss. The wonderous way that modern medicine can insert itself (literally) into that system and come away having solved some issue, or prevented some other issue, without having greatly impacted the system as a whole. Thank-you to the veterinarian and vet assistants who made me welcome and were happy to share the whys, wherefore, and how comes of what they did. I hope I will have the chance to come back.

Tuesday, December 1, 2009

Vitamin D

Recently there have been reports that Vitamin D will help protect you from H1N1. Vitamin D, long associated with bone health, has also been shown to be an immunomodulator – which is a big word used to say that Vitamin D has a role in regulating how your immune system functions. Through this function it can assist your body in fighting off infection and disease, which, of course, includes H1N1. This process can also help your body shorten the length and severity of the flu should you be infected.

Vitamin D can both enhance and inhibit the immune system. Think of it as providing maintenance and guidance to the immune system. This functions is leading to research in Vitamin D's role in prevention and treatment for not only infectious diseases, like colds and flus, but also autoimmune diseases (i.e. Multiple sclerosis and rheumatoid arthritis) and cancers. The recent recommendations for higher daily intake of Vitamin D in pregnant women is linked to a study of MS onset

Taking Vitamin D supplements will help your immune system stay strong, especially in the gloomy months of the west coast winter when our sun exposure driven vitamin D production is inhibited. At our latitude, from November to February, at a minimum, we are not exposed to sufficient UVB levels to create enough Vitamin D. Winter supplementation of Vitamin D is now strongly suggested.

It must be kept in mind that vitamin D is a fat soluble vitamin. A fat soluble vitamin is one which requires lipids (fat) to be absorbed into the body, and which can, then, be stored in fat within the body. This means that though a bit of supplementation is helpful, too much can create toxicity. Vitamin D toxicity can cause calcification of the kidney, as well as heart, lungs and blood vessels.

There is a reassessment of recommended intake for Vitamin D being undertaken but for now Health Canada holds firm with the tradition 200 IU's per day (or 5 micrograms) for those 0-50. That amount doubles to 400 IU for 50-70 year old and go up again to 600 IU for those past 70 years, to help maintain healthy bones. The recommendations however also suggest a 400 IU supplement for breast fed babies under one year. The maximum safe levels are much higher at 2000 IU per day for all over 1 year.

Fish is your most reliable dietary source of Vitamin D especially the fatty fish like salmon, tuna and mackerel – think of the same fish that supply you with Omega 3's and you are on the right track. Beef liver, eggs and cheese also naturally provide vitamin D. In Canada all of our milk, some cereal products and orange juices are supplemented with Vitamins D to a level such that two large glasses of milk should provide adequate Vitamin D for a child or adult.

If you decide to supplement Vitamin D look for a D3 supplement as they have been shown to have a stronger and longer impact on blood levels of Vitamin D than D2. Stay aware of the recommended intakes and be sensible. You drink a litre of milk a day? Extra Vitamin D is probably not necessary for you. You are a vegan or a lactose intolerant vegetarian – you may want to look at Vitamin D supplements. Of course if you are a snowbird and headed to Arizona any day now, you should get enough UVB to keep you in Vitamin D!

Some things to keep in mind generally about vitamins and supplementation generally. Always look for reputable names when you are looking at supplements. This is not the time to look only at price. Keep an eye out for quality. Ask a pharmacist or your doctor. Talk someone at a health food or vitamin store, they are are often well informed. Fat soluble vitamins (A, D, E, and K) do carry the risk of toxicity if you take high doses over time. Water soluble vitamins are harder to overdose on as they are easily excreted in urine, but you can overdose, and even if you do not and your body safely processes that mega-dose you decided to try you will simply end up with very costly pee!

As with anything you put in your body, a bit of knowledge, thought and common sense go a long way to keeping you healthy and happy – and moderation is always a good path.

Sunday, November 15, 2009

A Viagra Parfait?!?!?!?!

I heard the most ridiculous thing on the radio a few minutes ago – and I have four kids so I hear a lot of ridiculous things. Some chefs have whipped up a passion fruit dessert laced with Viagra. They wanted to “reinterpret” the medication into a new kind of aphrodisiac apparently.

Immediately I am trying to figure out how this could work. After all, Viagra is a prescription medication so how can it be sold in food? Is this a BYOBP (bring your own blue pill) deal? Do you have to bring your prescription and show some ID to be served? Do you have to promise that you won't share a spoon full? I mean come on, if this if supposed to be an aphrodisiac isn't it almost imperative to share?

Are there chefs out there running renegade from the pharmaceutical boards of the world? Is there about to be an outbreak of tented napkins in finer restaurants everywhere? Is someone going to have heart failure from sampling there neighbours dessert? In a word – NO.

Having heard this ridiculous little tidbit I did what any reasonably tech savvy woman with an interest in wellness would do – I “googled”. I discovered that the dessert in question was prepared for the Gastronomy 2009 fair in Bogota Columbia. How...anti-climatic. Due to the fact that Viagra does require a prescription this little treat will not be publicly available – though I am going to keep “googling” to see how long it takes them to post a recipe.

Ultimately, what I am realizing from this bit of absurdity is my own underlying assumption about prescription medication. The baseline belief that people will do dumb things with medicine. That someone somewhere would be willing to distribute a restricted substance in a gag dessert wasn't an impossibility for me. I was outraged and could see all kinds of legal issues but I did not immediately assume that this wasn't something that would happen. What a frightening realization. That we as a culture have become so accepting of the idea that people will abuse prescriptions that I didn't first question that part of the equation. How sad.

All over the world we have issues with people abusing prescription drugs ranging from narcotic painkillers through to our children's drugs. Perhaps the pain medication is the most obvious candidate for abuse either by the person to whom it has been given or by someone around them. But psychoactive drugs are also a major issue, from tranquilizers to the Ritalin, a drug most commonly given to children to decrease hyperactivity but abused by others for the speed-like affects it can give those not dealing with AD(H)D.

There are stats and research galore about the problem of prescription drug abuse. The links below will lead you to explore some interesting and informative articles. LINKS: Hamilton, ON statistics - check out the table on page two for a quick summary, a slide show of commonly abused presscription drugs, a local Victoria researcher comments about our attitudes towards pharmacauticals. Of course for those into less empirical research just pick up a copy of People, US, or some other weekly gossip magazine and you can read which celebrity is checking into rehab for vicodin abuse or whatever the current drug of choice might be – for the first, or the fourth time.

I am not a fan of drug taking for every problem, modern pharmaceuticals are an amazing tool in the wellness arsenal. Pharmacology provides us with tools to battle acute illness, to control symptoms, to ward of illness, to manage and slow the progression of long term illness. What a wonderful tool. How tragic that we choose to abuse and overuse this tool. We need to view pharmaceuticals with respect and as the potent tool they are in our quest to live long, healthy live.

Tuesday, November 10, 2009

Fascia – The Undiscovered Tissue

This last week the 2nd International Fascia Congress went ahead in Amsterdam. For four days the leading researchers presented their most recent findings to a mixed group of scientists and clinicians. After the congress there were a series of workshops, many of them very practical in nature. I am very excited to learn that the 2012 the fascial congress will be hosted by my professional organization, the British Columbia Massage Therapy Association of BC in Vancouver. To heighten my delight the 2012 congress will focus on the clinical application of current fascial research. I will be at that one, doing a little happy dance.

I expect many of you are trying to figure out what this fascia stuff is and why I am all giddy about it. Well, to steal the explanation my first fascial instructor gave me – fascia is the bag we walk around in. Imagine all the different bits in your body that you know about as being what is in the bag and that fascia is the bag. Recent research has shown that these are contractile bags – something that wasn't known when I first started studying fascia. A type of cell called a myofibroblast is responsible for this type of constriction - more on this later.

Fascia surrounds all nerve fibres, nerves, muscle fibres and muscles, organs, bones, joints and underlies our skin. Fascia acts to protect and separate structures, help maintain posture, and allow structures to glide upon one another. Problems in the fascia therefore create all sorts of problems in the body and often create mobile pain, pain that migrates far from its source and or moves around in the body without apparent cause.

The term fascia encompasses most of the connective tissue in the body and is the most pervasive substances in our bodies. Yet many people have never heard of it and our scientific exploration has just begun to bring fascia into the light. The western reductionist approach to our bodies and the treatment of them has allowed fascia to languish unexplored. Fascia coexists in form and function with all of our bodies systems and our piece-by-piece, system-by-system approach to treating our bodies meant that there has been virtually no exploration of this fascinating tissue. Basically, no one owned fascia because everyone owed fascia.

They owed fascia for the protection, lubrication and separation of the system in which they specialized. Fascia is the ultimate in multi-taskers. It can be thick, dense and organized, lending support to and separation between structures. It can be gossamer thin and allow structures to glide over one and other smoothly. It can be almost free of blood vessels and nerves or richly supplied with blood and sensory functions. Fascia can be so many things that initially anatomists did not realize it was all the same thing. So we have many names for the structures that are composed of fascia and a dearth of understanding of how all these different structures with their different compositions and functions can be discussed together.


On the bright side, there is a huge amount of research being done to increase our understanding of fascial tissue and its myriad impacts on the body. Some of the interesting directions that are being explored include the contractile nature of fascia, how tension is transmitted into the lumber fascia and how healthy fascia can move the way it does in the body without tearing.

Current research by Dr. Robert Schleip of the University of Ulm in Germany is exploring variability of myofibroblast density in fascia. Myofibroblasts are a contractile cell that are found in fascia and at wound sites. At wound sites the myofibroblast aid in wound closure, which speeds healing. However, in scar tissue these myofibroblasts sometimes stay around and continue to create contraction where it is not needed or wanted. What does this mean to fascia? If these cells are too active would they create undue restriction in the tissues they surround? Would this create tension and perhaps pain the the surrounded tissue?

Priscilla Barker and her associates have shown that contraction of various trunk muscles, including the transversus abdominis, create tension in the lumbar fascia, which then contributes to stability in the lumbar spine. Which explains why you are told to contract your tummy when you lift heavy objects.

One of the most visually arresting explorations of fascia comes to use from Dr. Jean Claude Guimberteau. Dr. Guimberteau has collected images, via laproscopic camera, of live fascial tissue and recorded the movement that occurs in the fascia and the neurovascular (nerves and blood vessels) tissue when a tendon is pulled on. The result is a video called "Strolling Under the Skin" and a book of the same title.

As a manual therapist I am excited by this research and what it tells us about one of the most frustrating things manual therapists experience. I have a client come in, I do all the indicated treatment and they leave feeling great – only to have the same pain and discomfort return almost immediately. Often, though not always, this type of pattern indicates fascial distortion or restriction. The good news is all this research that tells us about the function, structure and responses of fascia helps us to more easily recognize and successfully treat fascial issues and leave our clients with long term improvement in the performance and comfort of their bodies.

So there is a quick overview of the world of fascia and the reason I get so excited about this coming congress in Vancouver. What a wonderful opportunity to engage with and learn from the leading lights of fascial research. What a wonderful opportunity for the growth of understanding and good clinical application of that research by bringing together those who are exploring the science and those who are applying that science for your benefit.

Stay tuned for more on you and your body. Please let me know if there are wellness topics you are interested in or confused by.

Friday, October 30, 2009

H1N1

H1N1 – the pandemic!...?


I am continually shocked at the general response of the public to the H1N1 virus. The World Health Organization is calling it a pandemic so everyone is in a flap. What no one really seems to know is why they are in a flap. A person can give you the five things they are doing to help prevent the flu – i.e. Hand-washing, anti-bacterial hand sanitizer, eschewing hand shaking, etc – and they are desperate to get the flu shot – but if you asked them what the difference was between H1N1 and the “seasonal flu” they would be hard pressed to tell you. Am I the only person who finds this a bit ridiculous? It is like being afraid of the bogeyman when you were five– you don't know what he was but you knew he would get you if the nightlight wasn't left on! The thing is we are not five anymore and surely we should be able to distinguish the difference between the real and the imagined. So why are we not doing our “due diligence” and discovering what the difference is and what it is we are actually afraid of.


The two key features that seem to be causing the most concern is that it is a pandemic and that the patients are not primarily among the elderly or ill. First, pandemic status. The H1N1 virus is a pandemic because it is found in a large number of countries – that is the World Health Organization's actual criteria – how many countries' have reported cases. Pandemic status does not necessarily reflect how severe nor how contagious the disease actually is. The WHO is classing the H1N1 flu as being of “moderate” severity which means that the majority of cases will resolve without medical intervention within a week. Yearly in British Columbia we see 400-800 deaths from the seasonal flu – mainly among the elderly – since April of 2009 we have only seen 12 deaths in BC from H1N1. In all but one case there have been underlying health issues.


Second, the unusual patient profile arises from the fact that a very similar strain of flu swept through the population in 1957 and has left those born before 1957 with a high degree of immunity to the H1N1. This type of radical change in the flu virus is a cyclical occurrence.


The issue of greater immunity is one that seems to be creating a great deal of consternation for a number of people. One, this means that the elderly, usually the highest risk population, are relatively safe. Two, it has created the differing profiles for the two flu shots we are seeing this year. As the elderly have protection from the H1N1 but not the other flu strains expected this year, they get first “shot” at the seasonal flu vaccine. The earlier vaccination for the elderly will also allow their generally slower immune response plenty of time to build up its defences from that seasonal flu. As the younger public are generally more healthy and less likely to get the flu period they are being given access to the H1N1 shot first, as that flu is expected to make significant impacts earlier in the year, and will have an opportunity to get the seasonal shot later on. The two shots are best done separately and the height of seasonal flu impact is not expected until later on so it is safer to delay that vaccination than the H1N1. The seasonal flu is also one that most of us have relatively high resistance to as it is very like last years seasonal flu, and the year before that, and the year before that, etc.


Some myth-busting – the reason everyone is getting the H1N1 diagnoses right now is that is what is out there. The seasonal flu isn't around yet so if you have the flu, you have H1N1. Why aren't they testing? Because it costs a lot to test every sniffle. You are better off staying home, assuming you have H1N1 than running around at the most contagious stage wait to hear results from a test to say you have it. The WHO actually recommends that areas with high incidence of the virus (which includes BC) stop testing in favour of concentrating resources on prevention and care for the very ill. Yes, children have died from H1N1 and that is tragic. There is also evidence that there have been underlying conditions that increased risk for those children. This is consistent with the information provided to the public by various health authorities and though extraordinarily sad is not a cause for huge concern unless your child has one of those underlying conditions. If you think you have and have had the H1N1 virus DO NOT GET THE H1N1 SHOT! You body is already producing the antibodies the vaccine is designed to provoke so leave that shot for someone else!


What everyone should be keeping in mind is that unless you have a cough and a high fever you do not have the flu. Aches and pains, headache and fatigue are other common symptoms. In the under five crowd fever may be reduced but the incidence of vomiting and diarrhoea is increased. Though a runny nose and sore throat may occur they are more common with colds and throat infections than flu. Unless you fall into one of the high risk categories – underlying health concerns, first nations ethnicity, second or third trimester of pregnancy or under five you have a very low risk of developing a severe case of H1N1. If you think you have H1N1 and fall into one of the high risk categories talk to your doctor about anti-viral medication for yourself and anyone in your household who may be at risk. Once you have the virus the vaccine is not useful! Do follow basic hygienic precautions, do get the H1N1 shot if you are in one of the at risk categories, do stay home if you think you are sick (save the rest of us!) and stay rested and well generally – but do not panic, no one is helped by that!


I have included a few links below to some sites I looked at and believe would be useful reading for those wishing to know more.


Health Canada's H1N1 information site

BC Ministry of Health Bulletin for October 27th, 2009

World Health Organization (WHO) H1N1 information

Health Canada's H1N1 vaccine recommendations