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6 Body Parts You Can Repair Yourself

6 Body Parts You Can Repair Yourself

By: Matt Bean

If humans were like salamanders, that careless carpenter down the street would have a full set of fingers. But soon after our primordial ancestors slithered out of the muck, limb regenesis was chucked out of our genetic portfolio like John Bobbitt’s . . . well, you get the picture. The good news: Our bodies still retain some important repair mechanisms.

“Regeneration is actually a default state when we’re embryos,” says David L. Stocum, Ph.D., a regenesis researcher and dean of the school of science at Indiana University-Purdue University in Indianapolis. “We gradually lose that ability as we develop—except in certain kinds of tissues.”

The holdouts? Your arteries, skin, liver, lungs, and digestive tract, and certain parts of your brain. They’re all continually refreshed—if you’re healthy. “It’s called maintenance regeneration. It’s kind of like working on your car,” says Stocum. “You’ve got something going on—you’re low on oil, you buy a quart. A taillight goes out, you replace it. The clutch is acting up, you fix it. It’s the same thing with your body.”

(A few parts—including the liver and severed bits of fingertips—can even grow back. Studies suggest that adult stem cells in those areas play a role.)

Make sure your body has all the tools and parts it needs for a tune-up. Sometimes it’s as simple as revving your engine. Here’s how to mend broken bones, bypass clogged arteries, sprout new brain cells, and more—by optimizing your body’s regenerative powers.

Your Lungs

The damage:
Bad air, from smoke or smog, has clogged your air-exchange system.

The natural defense:
The lungs come equipped with a self-cleaning cycle, but overloading them with smoke or smog will gunk up the works. The cilia, or hairlike structures in your lungs, flagellate (that’s move) upward, coaxing the bad stuff out of the alveoli (little air sacs) and into the trachea, where the gunk grows into a frightening reminder of why you should have been better to your lungs to begin with. “It’s like a mucus escalator,” says Norman Edelman, M.D., a scientific advisor to the American Lung Association. “That’s a major form of defense. Within a few days to a week (after quitting smoking], you start feeling better, and you start coughing up all that bad mucus you have down there.”

What you can do:
Exercise will help loosen the large chunks after you first come clean. But you should be exercising already. Retinoic acid, or vitamin A, could actually help your lungs rebuild. Rats and mice with emphysema (they smoked tiny little cigarettes) given the compound were able to restore alveoli, which swap carbon dioxide for fresh oxygen to pre-emphysema levels, according to a recent study published in the European Respiration Journal. You’ll get several times the recommended daily allowance (900 micrograms) in only one serving of carrots, sweet potatoes, or mango.

Your Brain

The damage:
You scorched your gray matter in ways you can’t even remember.

The natural defense:

For years, it was thought that we stopped making fresh neurons in puberty, meaning that sometime in high school a long die-off of brain cells commenced. Turns out it only seems that way. “The brain is just another organ,” says Fred H. Gage, Ph.D., a professor in the laboratory of genetics at the Salk Institute and the first researcher to demonstrate new neuronal growth in mammals. “The brain is attempting to fix itself, just as skin tries to heal itself after a nick or cut.”

What you can do:
Work your body. Animal studies have shown that exercise can induce neurogenesis (the formation of new neurons) in two key areas of the brain: the hypothalamus, which helps form new memories and learning; and the olfactory bulb, where your sense of smell is located. The studies were done on rats, but what’s good for a rodent should be good for your brain: Try to get at least 30 minutes of exercise 2 or 3 days a week.

Your Guts

The damage:
Intestinal distress—there’s a five-alarm fire down below.

The natural defense:
Torch your gut with booze, barbecue, or both, and the lining of the intestine will simply slough it off. Cells there have one of the fastest cellular turnover rates in the body—each one clocks out after only a couple of days of (very, very dirty) work, making room for a new one.

What you can do:
Rough it and you’ll speed up the changing of the intestinal guard. “Having some roughage in your diet helps knock off a few of the older cells, almost like pruning a tree,” says Kenneth Koch, M.D., a professor of internal medicine and chief of gastroenterology at Wake Forest University school of medicine. Aim for 25 to 30 g fiber a day, starting with a whole-grain breakfast cereal, followed by whole-grain bread at lunch and lots of fruits and vegetables all day long. Dr. Koch recommends foods containing bran because they produce the most “stool bulk.” Delicious!

Your Liver

The damage:
Years of drinking. Or just a binge.

The natural defense:
Your liver is one of the only organs that can spring back after part of its tissue dies (the process is called compensatory hypertrophy). But that’s only if you don’t booze it to the point of cirrhosis, a chronic liver disease in which normal liver tissue is replaced with scarred, nonfunctional tissue. “People who are at risk consume more than 14 drinks a week or regularly have more than five at a time,” says Mark Mailliard, M.D., director of the hepatitis C program at the University of Nebraska.

What you can do:
Balance your liver. It’s really just a sponge full of chemicals, and a compound called glutathione (GSH) helps keep everything in check. Not only does GSH detoxify things like Tylenol (which is why alcoholics should never pop one while drinking—the by-product is toxic), but it’s also essential for liver regeneration. Rats unable to create GSH are also unable to grow back liver tissue, a University of Southern California study found.

“We’re not sure how it works. That’s the black box,” says Shelly Lu, M.D., the lead author of the study. “We know it helps with cell growth, and we know it’s involved in cell death, too.” Dr. Lu also knows that popping SAM-e—a supplement that converts to glutathione in the liver—can bring your GSH levels back to normal. In Europe, where SAM-e is actually prescribed for liver disease, the standard dosage is 1.2 grams (g), or about three tablets, per day. “If you’re a drinking man, you should also be taking folic acid and a B-vitamin complex, because they’re essential in the formation of SAM-e and glutathione,” adds Dr. Lu.

Your Bones

The damage:
A broken bone.

The natural defense:
“The healing response is generated by the living parts of the bone, the cells that live within the matrix,” says Sherwin S.W. Ho, M.D., an associate professor of orthopedic surgery at the University of Chicago. No, Keanu, healing faster isn’t a matter of choosing the red or blue pill. The matrix Dr. Ho is talking about is the lightweight but durable calcium carbonate structure that makes up most of your bone. Inside little pockets in the matrix are living cells, including bone-building osteocytes. “When you break a bone, they’re released from the pockets,” explains Dr. Ho.

What you can do:

Eat your greens. They’ll give you loads of vitamin K, a compound that helps lock bone cells into place as they lay down new scaffolding. One serving of spinach or broccoli provides more than the recommended intake. And break out the guacamole—avocados and tomatoes are good sources of vitamin K, too. Never heard of vitamin K? No surprise: Less than 50 percent of all men ages 18 to 44 get enough of it, researchers at Tufts University found.

Don’t take it lying down. A busted bone isn’t a 6-month excuse to sit on your butt. “At some point, you have to introduce a modicum of stress on the bone to stimulate those osteocytes to lay down more bone,” says Dr. Ho. Most breaks are ready for light stress at 6 weeks. Initially, Dr. Ho gives his patients squeeze balls and a regimen of light curls for arm breaks, and crutches for leg breaks. “Once you’re ready for heavier exercise, you should do a couple of sets of 15 to 20 repetitions per day at the highest resistance you can complete without pain,” says Dr. Ho.

Go ultra. If you’re a competitive ice-skater, power forward, or stripper and need to get back on the floor immediately, consider an ultrasound bone-healing system like the Exogen, which has been shown to help bones heal as much as 38 percent faster. Some insurance plans will cover sessions.

Your Arteries

The damage:
Narrowing blood vessels.

The natural defense:
When your pipes start to clog like I-405 at rush hour, a healthy body can handle the traffic by enlarging existing arteries and even growing new ones. It’s a natural process called angiogenesis, and here’s how it works.

Links between blood vessels, called arterial anastomoses, normally supply local tissues with blood, like exit ramps shunting traffic away from expressways. These exit ramps can be pressed into service as full-fledged arteries. “The cells in the vessel are able to detect when stress is increased, and that prompts signals that enlarge the anastomoses,” explains Ronald L. Terjung, Ph.D., associate chairman of the University of Missouri’s department of biomedical sciences. “Blood can cross over (to an unclogged vessel) and keep going.”

What you can do:
First, clean your pipes. Cholesterol can hinder the repair process. Researchers at Harvard medical school compared tissues from two groups of open-heart patients—one group with clogged vessels and the other with clear ones—and found that the clogged blood vessels weren’t able to respond to growth signals. “Angiogenesis can’t occur if the cells in the blood vessel are damaged or blocked by cholesterol,” says author Roger J. Laham, M.D., director of the Angiogenesis Research Center at Harvard medical school. So keep your cholesterol low.

Make your own detours by running, swimming, shooting hoops—whatever it takes to get your blood pumping. A 2004 study published in the journal BMC Physiology found that endostatin, a factor involved in arterial growth, shot up by an average of 73 percent in healthy volunteers after about 10 minutes on a treadmill at an average of 5 mph. Even better: The effects lingered for up to 2 hours, and the harder the subjects worked, the more endostatin was released.

An injection may one day help. Scientists at the University of Cincinnati injected three heart patients with something called “growth factor FGF1,” the “on” switch for arterial growth. After 3 months, all three were growing new arteries and had increased bloodflow. “They’re very, very small branches of arteries that are growing into an area just like a bush. They’re almost microscopic,” says Lynne Wagoner, M.D., the lead study author. “Some patients are able to do this naturally on their own, but in the patients we’re studying, we’re basically doing that for them.” The treatment is slated for approval in 2006.

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5 Ways to Break Through a Fitness Plateau

5 Ways to Break Through a Fitness Plateau

By: Michael Mejia

I was stuck. Thousands of biceps curls for months on end, and nothing. Not even half an inch. My arms had simply stopped growing.

I took the Taoist approach: I quit trying. Instead of doing direct arm work, like curls, I concentrated on my chest, shoulders, and back, hitting them with heavy-lifting sets of chinups, rows, presses, and dips.

That’s when it happened. My arms inflated.

Truth is, I hadn’t really stopped working my arms. I was working them harder than ever—by association. The exercises I was using for my chest and back were also enlisting my biceps and triceps, stimulating more muscle fibers in different ways than with the arm isolation exercises.

My realization: Changing the training approach is the trigger for blasting through a frustrating fitness plateau, in either muscle or strength.

Since then, I’ve experimented with dozens of rut-busting methods. Here I list five of the best. For maximum benefit, use only one technique at a time, for one exercise at a time, every 4 weeks. If you’ve been lifting consistently for a year or more, you’ll change the look of your workout—and your muscles.

Move Faster

When you lift weights slowly, your body uses only whatever muscle fibers are necessary. As those fibers fatigue, others take their place, while the first ones recover and wait to return to action—it’s sort of a tag-team effort. So if you’re doing 10 slow repetitions, a fiber might work for the first three or four repetitions, be replaced by another, and then recover to contribute on the final two or three repetitions of your set. This limits the number of muscle fibers you’re using, unless you’re lifting near maximal weights.

The fix: Lift light weights fast. “Trying to move a weight as fast as you can forces your body to recruit more muscle fibers,” says Craig Ballantyne, C.S.C.S., author of Turbulence Training. This will help you improve strength quickly, while challenging your muscles in a different way than heavy weights.

Examples: For exercises like the bench press, use a weight that’s about 40 to 55 percent of the heaviest weight you can lift one time. Do six to eight sets of three to five repetitions, resting for 60 seconds between sets.

Note: Sometimes you need to overhaul your routine to get your body to the next level. Men’s Health Personal Trainer provides a multitude of programs to choose from, as well as customization options to keep your body from getting bored. Kick your routine into gear and join today.

Lift Light

Small blood vessels called capillaries deliver oxygen, amino acids, and hormones to your muscles, helping them recover—and grow—faster. Research has shown that heavy weight training decreases capillary density.

The fix: Do high-repetition sets with light weights (25 percent of the amount you can lift once) on your days off, targeting whatever muscle group is lagging. “It’ll increase the number of capillaries in your working muscles, allowing better nutrient transfer,” says Chad Waterbury, a strength coach in Arizona.

Examples: Perform a total of 100 repetitions with the light weight. So if your triceps are lacking, continue to do your normal workout 1 or 2 days a week. But you’ll also do 100 repetitions of a triceps exercise on the other 5 days. Use a weight that’s about 25 percent of the heaviest amount you can lift one time. Do four sets of 25 repetitions, or two sets of 50 repetitions, spaced throughout the day.

Do More

Hormones regulate almost every physiological process in the body. Stimulate the release of hormones through exercise and you’ll improve body composition and performance, says Jeff Volek, Ph.D., R.D., an exercise-and-nutrition researcher at the University of Connecticut.

The fix: Start hormones flowing by doing more total sets and repetitions, and limiting rest periods to 60 seconds. But restrict this to a single exercise and switch moves every 4 weeks to avoid overtaxing your body.

Examples: Decide if you’re going for size or strength. For size, do five sets of 10 repetitions with a weight that’s 55 to 65 percent of the amount you can lift one time. For strength, do five sets of five repetitions with a weight that’s 85 to 90 percent of that amount.

Think Small

“Most men try to increase the load by too much, and stall their training programs as a result,” says John Williams, C.S.C.S., co-owner of Spectrum Conditioning in Port Washington, New York. Adding too much weight too fast disrupts your muscles‘ adaptation process, which should be gradual. A psychotherapist might call it baby steps. We prefer a much cooler term: microloading. It’s the simplest way to see immediate gains when you’re stuck in a rut.

The fix: Increase the weight by the smallest amount possible. This guarantees progress. “Psychologically, increasing your weight more frequently is tangible proof that you’re making progress,” says Williams.

Examples: Use 1 1/2-pound PlateMates for dumbbells instead of jumping up in 5-pound increments. On the barbell, use 2 1/2-pound plates instead of the 5- and 10-pounders you’d normally add on.

Identify Weaknesses

Every guy, on every lift, has a sticking point: that part of the move at which he’s the weakest. Find yours and strengthen it, and you’ll be able to lift heavier weights, which will make your muscles work harder and grow faster. Your weak link is easy to locate: It’s the point at which your movement starts to decelerate.

The fix: “Partial overloads,” an idea from Alwyn Cosgrove, C.S.C.S., a trainer and the owner of Results-Fitness in Santa Clarita, California. Set a pair of pins in a power rack, level with your deceleration point, so you start at your weak spot. Place the barbell on the pins and perform the exercise in the shortened range of motion. For virtually any lift, follow these guidelines: Do one set of 10 repetitions lifting about 70 percent of the maximum weight you can lift one time. Rest 3 minutes, then increase the weight by 10 to 20 percent and crank out two more sets of six repetitions.

Example: In the bench press, you’ll start at the slow-down point—about two-thirds of the way up, for most men. Each time you complete a repetition, allow the bar to rest on the pins for 2 seconds, then repeat. Wait 3 minutes after each set, and then finish with a full-range set of six repetitions.

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6 body-energizing pre workout supplements that can make the difference between an average and a amazing workout.

6 body-energizing pre workout supplements that can make the difference between an average and a amazing workout.

By Vince Del Monte

If you’re like me, then you like to turn good into great every chance you get.

That includes your workouts.

I would rather have an amazing workout rather than an average workout.

Wouldn’t you?

As a fitness enthusiast and bodybuilder you are always trying to get to that next level of your physique, especially with short and t-shirt season fast approaching!

Today I want to cover six super star supplements that you can use 60-minute to 30-minutes before your workouts. This information is geared to my advanced readers, with at least one year of consistent weight training experience and looking for an edge.

You understand that nutrition and a professionally-designed training program are the key components to an amazing workout but you also admit that the difference between an average workout and amazing workout can be supplementation. Supplements do make a 5-10% difference so if you’re at that point in your training where that extra 5-10% is just what you need, I’ve got some killer preworkout formulas to improve your training.

As you know, my first body transformation from 149 pounds to 190 pounds – a gain of 41 pounds of muscle in 6 months – resulted from very little supplement use.  Just whey protein powder, a multi vitamin and fish oils.

Over the past few years I’ve been experimenting with more supplements and a variety of pre workout rituals and I’m happy to share that these were six super star supplements that have had a solid impact on my workouts.

Remember, without eating quality carbohydrates and proteins 90-minutes before you workout, don’t expect for these six supplements to power you through your workout alone.

Super Star Supplement #1: Creatine

Unless you’ve been living under a rock you know that creatine is one of the most potent supplements ever discovered.  Creatine can help you improve your lean muscle mass in as little as 2-weeks, boost energy, endurance, strength, power and even burn fat.

Top Reason To Use: The biggest benefit is that it helps create more intensity in your workouts, which is what separates the men from the boys in the gym.  The longer and harder you can train, the more muscle you can gain and more fat you burn.

Dosage Guidelines: Males don’t need more than 5 grams before their workout and females don’t need more than 5 grams after their workout. Females can use as little as 2.5 grams before a workout.

INSIDER TIP: Drink a lot of water and don’t let it sit in your liquid for too long or else it’ll lose it’s potency.  Also, don’t take creatine with alcohol or caffeine because creatine works by creating an osmotic affect (water storage), which leads to cells swelling with water.

I currently use Power XD from Blue Star Nutrition.  Use the coupon code “maximize” if you pick this up and you’ll get some free stuff.  The CEO of Blue Star, Adam Cloet, is a good friend of mine.

Super Star Supplement #2 Beta-Alanine

Beta-alanine is a non-essential amino acid naturally made in your body. Beta-alanine can boost muscular strength, power output, muscle mass, anaerobic endurance and aerobic endurance.  When you exercise your body creates lactic acid, which is when you experience the burn feeling.  This prevents you from being able to push your body to the max, maintain forceful muscle contractions and do more reps, which seriously hampers your ability to make new muscle gains.

Top Reason To Use It: Beta-alanine produces carnosine in your muscles, which leads to increased power, strength and endurance. You’ll also experience intense vasodilation/pumps from your first few doses of beta-alanine.  This happens because beta-alanine produces carnosine and carnosine is a precursor to producing nitric oxide.

Dosage Guidelines: No more then 3-5 grams per day is needed to significantly boost carnosine levels.

INSIDER TIP: It takes about 3-4 weeks to feel a big difference but you should stay on it for at least 3 months minimum to optimize carnosine levels.

Super Star Supplement #3 Protein Isolate Blend

If you’ve been following my reading since 2006, you’ve likely added a high-quality, low carb protein powder into your diet. Excellent job. If, however, you you want to maximize your workout, you need to include a blend of isolated proteins to give you the best protein sources including whey, casein, egg and milk isolates.

Most protein powders have at least one of these isolates, but the product I use, ISO-SMOOTH, delivers all four of the best protein sources in isolate form.

Top Reason To Use It: Bottom line, protein is critical for muscle growth. Your muscles need protein to recover and in turn grow after a workout. Taking a blend protein like ISO-SMOOTH provides a rapid and extended absorption rate because their is both fast and long releasing proteins for an immediate and sustained anabolic effect. This is one of the key elements to accelerated growth from your workouts.

Dosage Guidelines: Males should take at least 30 grams, which is usually 1 scoop.  Females can receive the same benefits with at least 15 grams of protein before their workout.

INSIDER TIP: I do make a small commission if you purchase Adam’s ISO-SMOOTH, which is not the reason you’re going to hear more about Blue Star Nutrition in the coming months.  I really like ISO-SMOOTH because it contains CLA, flax powder and bromelain (which are digestive enzymes), plus you get your 4 blends of protein in 1. Lastly, Adam’s ISO-SMOOTH is lactose free, sugar free, mixes easily and tastes incredible.  Don’t forget to use the “maximize” code for some free stuff.

Super Star Supplement #4 Caffeine

Not only does caffeine give you a spike in the morning but it can give your workout a spike. A popular stimulant, for endurance athletes, research now shows that caffeine works equally effective for weight training. Caffeine works better during a fat-burning cycle when you’re not taking supplements like creatine and arginine.  Do not mix and match these supplement together. When taken before a training session, caffeine helps break down fat instead of stored carbs (glycogen) for energy.  It also helps release calcium, which leads to more forceful muscle contractions.

Top Reason To Use It: Caffeine dulls your pain receptors and helps slow and prevent fatigue, which means you’ll train longer and harder leading to increased muscle mass and more fat loss.

Dosage Guidelines: Males can take 200-300 milligrams before training and females don’t need more than 200 milligrams.

INSIDER TIP: For accelerated fat loss, have a large cup of black coffee on a empty stomach and do cardio at 6am in a fasted state.  Just walk on a treadmill for 35 minutes 5x a week at a steep incline and you’ll lose at least an extra 1-2 pounds of fat each week.

Super Star Supplement #5 Brach Chain Amino Acids

Another power-house supplement that has been getting a lot of attention in literature and a lot of experimentation from myself and my clients. Here’s what you need to know: BCAAs are composed of three essential amino acids (leucine, isoleucine and valine). Your body relies on these three stooges for muscle protection and ability to build muscle. The more BCAAs in your body, the less chance for muscle loss.

Top Reason To Use Them: They prevent muscle breakdown so if you’re cutting fat be sure to include them in your diet and always have them in your cupboard.

Dosage Guidelines: Males can take 10 grams before a workout and females can take 5 grams before a workout.

INSIDER TIP: Mix 5 grams of creatine and 5 grams of glutamine to make the ultimate “muscle-protection” cocktail before your workout.

Pretty much all BCAAs products are the same and pretty cheap to make and cheap to purchase. I use Adam’s BCAA XD brand because of the XD technology.  Again, don’t forget to use the coupon code “maximize” to get some free stuff included.

Super Star Supplement #6 Arginine

Although you can get arginine, a essential amino acid, from almonds and several types of nuts, your body does not always get enough of it. Arginine in your pre workout cocktail can increase blood flow and growth hormone levels. It converts into nitric oxide once ingested, which dilates (opens) blood vessels thus ensuring fluids and nutrients reach the muscles, quickly. This means you’ll experience a stronger pump in your muscles, which can have indirect influence on muscle growth.

Top Reason To Use It: Arginine has a powerful antioxidant ability, supporting the immune system by scavenging free radicals. This helps speed up recovery so you can train longer and harder next time.

Dosage Guidelines: Males can take as high as 5 grams and females 3 grams.

INSIDER TIP: Too much arginine can lead to diarrhea, weakness and nausea, so start with a smaller dosage then recommended above and increase gradually.

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6 Easy Ways to Beat Job Stress

6 Easy Ways to Beat Job Stress

By: Eddie Robbins

Raise your hand if the following are true: Your boss recites Dilbert. The staff consists of the Pink Floyd Animals trifecta: dogs, pigs, and sheep. You hear blood churning through your ears, taste adrenaline in your saliva, feel sweat spreading out from your armpits as your stress levels rise, rise, rise…and then sit there and boil. No release. No escape.

Okay, hands down. Work stress rips us apart. It sabotages us. Inspires stupid comments snapped at people just as stupid. Makes us a Monday-through-Friday phosphorous burn.

Enough already. Tomorrow, and every day thereafter, remember these tips for controlling the weight on your shoulders. Because if you think your job isn’t your life, you’re dead wrong.

Throw Up Your Hands

And start juggling. “Juggling gets me out of my chair,” says Dr. Posen, admitting that his limited skills are actually helpful. “It’s hard to juggle without laughing at yourself.” Plus, it’s nearly impossible to think about work when you’re concentrating on juggling. And that’s the point: Regularly schedule 5 minutes of laughing distraction. Pick up Juggling for the Complete Klutz, beanbags included (about $10 on Amazon).

Buy a New Multivitamin

Tomorrow, revise your morning routine to include your antistress pill. In a University of Birmingham study of men 18 to 42 years old, British researchers found that those who took a daily multivitamin high in vitamin C and all the B vitamins enjoyed a 21 percent drop in anxiety, while those popping a placebo actually felt more stressed. (Perhaps from feeling deceived.) Even better, the multi men also rated themselves less tired and more focused. The probable cause: Research has shown that B and C vitamins help reduce the effects of stress. If you want to try the multivitamin used in the study—Berocca—go to . Ninety pills will run you $40.

Do the PC Stretch

With all due deference to Bill Gates, this is for everyone shackled to a friggin’ computer. “When we’re under stress, we usually lean forward to focus on what we’re doing,” says Neil Chasan, a physical therapist in Seattle. “This makes the muscles of the neck and lower back work harder—and they’re small to begin with.”

For quick relief, do what Chasan does when he’s deskbound: Clasp your hands behind your neck and squeeze your shoulder blades together. Now let your head fall forward so your chin is close to your chest, and bring your elbows together in front of you so they’re touching. Pull down with your hands for several seconds, then release. Repeat six to eight times whenever you’re knotted up.

Spy on Yourself

Hunched over a keyboard with knots in your shoulders? Yeah, and you probably didn’t realize it until you stopped to think about it. But who has time to stop when everybody around you is shouting, “Go, go, go!” like the Laker Girls from hell? West Virginia University researchers found that people’s stress levels dropped by 54 percent after a 2-month “mindfulness training” program—that is, simply paying more attention to the symptoms of stress, such as bunched-up muscles and fast, scattered thinking.

The good news: You don’t need a 2-month course. “Even minor adjustments can produce big benefits,” says Kimberly Williams, Ph.D., author of the study. This means paying attention if your thoughts begin to race or your breathing becomes shallow. And when you notice knots in your shoulders, you can . . .

Say the “O” Word

Ask David Allen, author of Getting Things Done: The Art of Stress-Free Productivity, what’s the biggest office stress buster, and his answer is immediate: organization. “It’s what’s most needed and most lacking.” Even a very basic organizational habit can cumulatively save you hours in a work week. And, of course, more time means less stress. Allen’s most valuable habit? “My end-of-week review. I go over my inbox and my work lists. By far, it’s my best-spent time.” Thanks to that one wise Friday hour, he’s never frazzled or overwhelmed when the whistle blows on Monday morning.

Dump the Coffee

We know, coffee is in your blood—and that’s the problem. Caffeine is liquid stress, simultaneously boosting adrenaline production and suppressing adenosine, a natural relaxant in your brain. “Eliminating caffeine is more effective than any other stress-reduction strategy I know,” says David B. Posen, M.D., a stress expert and author of Always Change a Losing Game. In fact, Dr. Posen claims that 75 percent of his decaffeinated patients feel significantly more relaxed and, ironically, more energetic—mostly from better sleep.

To avoid withdrawal headaches, Dr. Posen suggests gradually cutting back by one cup at a time, beginning with your last cup of the day.

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Will fasting jumpstart my weight loss efforts and boost my health?

Q Will fasting jumpstart my weight loss efforts and boost my health?
A Fasting is the deliberate abstinence from food. Fasting has long been touted as a healthy process with many benefits such as cleaning the system, ridding the body of so-called toxins, benefiting the intestinal track, boosting metabolism, and jumpstarting weight loss. However none of these notions are true, nor are they backed up by medical research.While a short-term fast probably won’t harm most people, it could be quite dangerous for others, depending on their medical conditions, health histories, and medication use. I strongly urge you to talk to your physician before ever starting a fast.

During normal metabolic conditions (non-fasting), the body gets its energy primarily from glucose and fat (in the blood), which are supplied by the carbohydrates and fats that you eat. Both the brain and nervous systems use blood glucose for energy and proper functioning. Your body also stores energy in both the muscles and liver in the form of glycogen.

Within only hours after starting a fast, when dietary glucose is used up, the body draws on its glycogen stores, but these don’t last very long. When these stores are exhausted, your body enters an altered metabolic state. It turns to its own protein (and a portion of its fat) to make more glucose for the brain and nervous system. This results in a considerable breakdown of both lean muscle tissue and fat tissue, and a production of ketones. This is not considered a healthy or desirable state.

As a result, you might lose weight, but it is due to water loss, dehydration, and muscle tissue wasting, and is usually accompanied with symptoms such as fatigue and dizziness.

Therefore, you can reason that after years of abusing the body with a poor diet and excessive fat and calories, a fasting state is not the answer to better health. Your body is truly craving proper nutrition, including whole grains, fresh fruits and vegetables, low-fat dairy products, healthy fats, and lean meats, fish, beans, and other protein sources. Then and only then, can the body systems work together effectively and efficiently. This healthy diet will results in improved energy and overall health.

NOTE: Certain medical procedures and tests require patients to fast for a designated time period. Always follow the advice of your primary health care provider in these situations.

Written by Becky Hand, Licensed & Registered Dietitian

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