FRUITS AND VEGGIES- MORE MATTERS MONTH (SEPTEMBER)

Recently I have tried to completely revamp how I address veggies in my daily routine. I grew up where vegetables were just something on the plate you had to eat with dinner and that was pretty much it. That had led to a long battle with vegetables I am most definitely not winning, but it is getting better. While pregnant with little man, Lee I had difficulties with high TSH levels and gallstones. These are things that really should have been addressed prior to pregnancy, but they were unknowns to me as I never experienced gall stone pain (to my knowledge) and was always told my TSH was “within normal limits”, which I don’t think is completely true, but regardless here we are.

I was told I needed to get on medication through the remainder of my pregnancy, long story short we tried alternatives (different blog for another day), didn’t work out, ended up on the medication. Now, 4 months postpartum, labs have been drawn again (I have also since stopped taking the medication) and thankfully TSH has come back down, but we still have some room for improvement.

Here is the good part. DID YOU KNOW THAT VEGGIES CAN HELP SUPPORT THE ENDOCRINE SYSTEM! THE SYSTEM THAT LITERALLY CONTROLS THE HORMONES THROUGHOUT YOUR BODY. Yeah, yeah Kaila, everyone knows fruits and veggies are good for you. STOP, please, because they are not just “good for you” they are like really really good for you. So, find ways to make eating them easier and fun because you need them, like bad.

Organic vs Non organic- find the dirty dozen on THE ENVIRONMENTAL WORKING GROUP page where they discuss the “dirtiest” fruits and veggies, these are ones you will want to consider purchasing organic (again, we can get more into this another time).  This group also discusses and verifies beauty products and has been a household friend of our - I actually have the ranking number on a bunch of our products in the house. Beauty products are also a huge endocrine disruption and has played a role in switching up for better products in order to naturally regulate hormone levels.

If you’re trying to get more fruits and veggies into your daily routine, you can try introducing some Dynamic Fruits & Greens by NUTRIDYN while finding ways to cook and consume actually fruits and vegetables as the real thing is almost always better, sometimes it just isn’t realistic to consume enough. This should be taken as a supplement to enhance your fruits and veggie intake rather than try to completely be supported by.

This blog post does not replace visiting a provider that can best serve your health needs.

Chiropractic and Infantile Colic: 1 Hour and 12 Minutes Less Crying

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6844054/#CR26

Babies come and go in waves at the office, we have a lot of full bellies waddling in and out these days, so a new crop is about to arrive. Moms and dads to be are mostly thinking about delivery, but we manage to squeeze in a little conversation about the bundle of joy that will be a new resident of their household as well. And sometimes, the little bundle can be very unhappy and be quite vocal about it.

I was listening to a research podcast on my drive home last week. Infantile colic is one of those health problems that really, REALLY matters to the parents but for which conventional medicine is largely hands off , with the idea that the baby will outgrow it in time. That is little consolation to child and parent. The munchkins must be feeling really quite miserable to cry themselves into exhaustion and the parents feel on edge and powerless.

Colic is a complicated set of possible triggers to unpack, however chiropractic care has time again shown to be worth exploring and really safe. The research article focuses on evidence for various integrative approaches to infantile colic. Manual therapy showed on average 1 hour and 12 minutes less crying per day in infants receiving chiropractic care. One of the podcast commentators was wondering how much of a quality of life impact these 72 minutes of daily screaming would have. The other commentator is heard bursting out laughing. Obviously not a question anyone would ask who has ever been in that situation.

NATIONAL TRAIL MIX DAY- AUGUST 31ST

TRAIL_MIX.jpg

NATIONAL TRAIL MIX DAY

AUGUST 31, 202

TRAIL MIX- SO SIMPLE, YET SUCH A TASTY SNACK AND WHEN DONE RIGHT PACKED WITH HEALTH BENEFITS. MANY INDIVIDUALS AND FAMILIES SEEM TO HAVE A HARD TIME FINDING HEALTHY SNACK OPTIONS, THIS IS A GREAT “GO TO” TO HAVE ON HAND!

THE FOLLOWING IS A FEW OF THE CLASSICS FOUND IN TRAIL MIX AND SOME OF THEIR BENEFITS-

-          Walnuts:

o   Promote both brain and heart health.

o   High in omega 3 fatty acids *2.5g/1 serving

o   High in protein *5g/1oz

o   High in vitamins & minerals *Copper, folic acid, phosphorus, vit B6, manganese, vit E

o   Great source of antioxidants and fiber

-          Almonds:

o   High in unsaturated fat

o   High vit E *7.27mg/1oz (nearly half of daily requirement)

o   High protein *6g/1 oz

o   Good source of calcium *76.3mg/1 oz

o   Great source of iron *1.0mg/1 oz

o   Great source of manganese *0.6mg/1oz (almost half of daily requirement)

-          Pecans:

o   Heart healthy

o   Improves digestion, fiber packed *2.7g/1 oz

o   Anti-inflammatory, magnesium packed *1.3mg/1 oz (over half of daily requirement)

-          Dried Cherries:

o   High in antioxidants

o   Source of melatonin (help with sleep)

o   Source of natural fiber *1.6g/100g

o   Source of natural potassium *173mg/100g

o   Source of natural copper *0.104mg/100g

o   Source of natural protein *1g/100g

o   Source of natural iron *0.3mg/100g

o   Source of natural carbohydrates *12g/100g

o   Vitamin source- vitA *1,283IU/100g, vitC *10mg/100g, vitE *0.07mg/100g (boost immune)

-          Cashews:

o   Heart healthy

o   Bone health

o   High copper *622mg/1oz

o   High protein *5.17g/ 1oz

o   Source of calcium *10mg/ 1oz

o   Vitamin source- vitC & vitB

-          Coconut flakes:

o   High protein *3g/80g

o   High manganese *60% daily value (DV)

o   High copper *44% DV

o   High fat *27g/80g (about 90% unsaturated)

o   High fiber *7g/80g

-          Dark chocolate chips:

o   High antioxidant

o   May improve blood flow to the brain

o   May reduce heart disease risk

What are your favorite trail mix ingredients?

NATIONAL GOLF MONTH- AUGUST

Golf.JPG

National Golf Month

Golfers & Back Pain

Golf is a fantastic way to keep moving and exercise with sport of the summer. Well, in honor of national golf month coming to a close, were going to discuss a bit with golfers and low back pain.

Most Americans usually experience some back pain at some point in their life (fun fact- there is a reduced chance of needing spinal surgery when the first point of contact for back pain is a chiropractor!) weather it be from a muscle strain, filamentous sprain, disc derangement, stenosis or something different. Back pain is arguable the most common injury in golfers. If the pain is severe, please go and visit a provider first to evaluate the symptoms and provide the appreciate care and recommendations based on your specific needs. As posted in an earlier blog, the mobility/stability continuum indicating alternating portions should be mobile vs stable. If there is a lack of mobility in the thoracic spine or the hips (they should be mobile) then the low back may be compensated and become mobile when it needs to be stable. A couple of exercises that can be tried may include cat/cow to keep some mobility in the pelvis while the dead bug exercise will improve core contraction and activation to help with stability through back and fore swing.

Yoga Blocks for Ergonomic Modification and More-

I wish I had run into this earlier podcast by Chris Masterjohn 4 months ago. At the time, we were fielding a lot of emergent questions from patients trying to find the most comfortable way to work from home on a short notice, often with nothing more than a laptop and an old kitchen chair. The low low tech retrofits I was proposing (old books, shoes boxes), were definitely doing the trick, but Masterjohn’s use of the two simple yoga blocks in endless possibilities of propping, elevating, and lowering is quite brilliant.

The fall of 2020 is looking more and more like a lot of people are going to continue working from home - quite possibly joined by school age children on a part or full time basis. As such, every one in the house needs to be able to modify work and study surfaces to fit their individual needs, and everyone needs to be able to switch positions on a frequent basis. The blocks may be the easiest and cheapest way to achieve that, and as an added bonus, less aesthetically disruptive than many other solutions.

https://chrismasterjohnphd.com/podcast/2016/05/03/the-daily-lipid-podcast-episode-7-many

Cannon Falls Library "How to" Series- How To: Breathe

The Cannon Falls, MN Library is hosting a “How to” series and here at the office we have been helping with a few of them. Our most recent YouTube video is How to: Breathe. In this video you can find some at home activities you can participate in to make the most of your breathing.

Keep up to date with our YouTube videos by subscribing! We will continue to release additional video for at home activity use!

CHIROPRACTIC BEYOND PAIN PART 4 : DYSAUTONOMIA: CIRCULATION, DIGESTION, ETC.WWW

https://www.researchgate.net/publication/320306138_Heart_Rate_Variability_to_Assess_the_Changes_in_Autonomic_Nervous_System_Function_Associated_With_Vertebral_Subluxation

The last part in the “beyond pain” series is about the correlation of spinal functional lesions and their impact on the regulation of your autonomic nervous system (referred to as ANS).

When I received my education 25 + years ago, autonomic dysfunction was thought to be a relatively rare disorder and there were few, much less non-invasive testing for it. Much has changed since then, and ANS dysfunction of various severity is recognized as prevalent, even leading to the current terminology DYSAUTONOMIA.

The ANS regulates automatic, unconscious vital functions such as heart rate, blood pressure, digestive enzyme production, heat/cold thermostat and many, many more. The ANS is on a constant feedback loop gathering information from the periphery, analyzing in the lower brain centers and sending signals down the spinal cord for appropriate response: elevating your heart rate for exercise, moving your bowels when full, increasing sweating when hot etc… So dysautonomia can be very confusing to diagnose or define, since it can involve very different symptoms that may be vague.

Chiropractors from many decades ago may never have heard of the term dysautonomia, however their work back then and our work today continues to powerfully help regulate the ANS by eliminating unnecessary breakdown in the feedback loop, both sensory as well as the ANS motor system. I have found that to be especially true in children, and more recently infants dealing with physically challenging births. I believe that many of the cases of unexplained colic, fussy babies, is actually a manifestation of autonomic dysfunction especially to the delicate digestion of newborns.

The “diagnosis” of dysautonomia is a broad and complex topic that cannot be addressed in this blog, but hopefully soon. There are simply physical tests that can be a clue (asymetrical blood pressure and SPO2 for example), advanced medical testing (table tilt, sweat test), and some newer non-invasive and inexpensive in office diagnostics such as heart rate variability.