Tag Archives: health

Benefits of Writing

Thanks to my awesome friend and published author Amy Nichols for pointing this out on Facebook.

Science Shows Something Surprising About People Who Love to Write

No matter the quality of your prose, the act of writing itself leads to strong physical and mental health benefits, like long-term improvements in mood, stress levels and depressive symptoms. In a 2005 study on the emotional and physical health benefits of expressive writing, researchers found that just 15 to 20 minutes of writing three to five times over the course of the four-month study was enough to make a difference.

By writing about traumatic, stressful or emotional events, participants were significantly more likely to have fewer illnesses and be less affected by trauma. Participants ultimately spent less time in the hospital, enjoyed lower blood pressure and had better liver functionality than their counterparts.

It turns out writing can make physical wounds heal faster as well. In 2013, New Zealand researchersmonitored the recovery of wounds from medically necessary biopsies on 49 healthy adults. The adults wrote about their thoughts and feelings for just 20 minutes, three days in a row, two weeks before the biopsy. Eleven days later, 76% of the group that wrote had fully healed. Fifty-eight percent of the control group had not recovered. The study concluded that writing about distressing events helped participants make sense of the events and reduce distress.

Even those who suffer from specific diseases can improve their health through writing. Studies have shown that people with asthma who write have fewer attacks than those who don’t; AIDS patients who write have higher T-cell counts. Cancer patients who write have more optimistic perspectives and improved quality of life.

So what is it about writing that makes it so great for you?

James W. Pennebaker has been conducting research on writing to heal for years at the University of Texas at Austin. “When people are given the opportunity to write about emotional upheavals, they often experience improved health,” Pennebaker writes. “They go to the doctor less. They have changes in immune function.”

Why? Pennebaker believes this act of expressive writing allows people to take a step back and evaluate their lives. Instead of obsessing unhealthily over an event, they can focus on moving forward. By doing so, stress levels go down and health correspondingly goes up.

You don’t have to be a serious novelist or constantly reflecting on your life’s most traumatic moments to get these great benefits. Even blogging or journaling is enough to see results. One study found that blogging might trigger dopamine release, similar to the effect from running or listening to music.

From long-term health improvements to short-term benefits like sleeping better, it’s official: Writers are doing something right.

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Zombie Update – Brain cells can outlive the body

Brain cells can outlive the body

By Tia Ghose

Published February 26, 2013

LiveScience

  • neurons

    Mouse neurons implanted into a rat brain can live twice as long as the mice from which they were taken, new research suggests. (iDesign, Shutterstock)

Brain cells can live at least twice as long as the organisms in which they reside, according to new research.

The study, published Monday, Feb. 25, in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, found that mouse neurons, or brain cells, implanted into rats can survive with the rats into old age, twice as long as the life span of the original mice. The findings are good news for life extension enthusiasts.

‘We are slowly but continuously prolonging the life of humans.’

– Dr. Lorenzo Magrassi, a neurosurgeon at the University of Pavia in Italy 

“We are slowly but continuously prolonging the life of humans,” said study co-author Dr. Lorenzo Magrassi, a neurosurgeon at the University of Pavia in Italy.

So if the human life span could be stretched to 160 years, “then you are not going to lose your neurons, because your neurons do not have a fixed lifetime.”

Long-lived cells
While most of the cells in the human body are being constantly replaced, humans are born with almost all the neurons they will ever have. [10 Odd Facts About the Brain]

Magrassi and his colleagues wanted to know whether neurons could outlive the organisms in which they live (barring degenerative diseases like Alzheimer’s).

To do so, the researchers took neurons from mice and implanted them into the brains of about 60 rat fetuses.

The team then let the rats live their entire lives, euthanizing them when they were moribund and unlikely to survive for more than two days, and then inspected their brains. The life span of the mice was only about 18 months, while the rats typically lived twice as long.

The rats were found to be completely normal (though not any smarter), without any signs of neurological problems at the end of their lives.

And the neurons that had been transplanted from mice were still alive when the rats died. That means it’s possible the cells could have survived even longer if they were transplanted into a longer-lived species.

Life extension
The findings suggest that our brain cells won’t fail before our bodies do.

“Think what a terrible thing it could be if you survive your own brain,” Magrassi told LiveScience.

While the findings were done in rats, not humans, they could also have implications for neuronal transplants that could be used for degenerative diseases like Alzheimer’s disease or Parkinson’s disease, Magrassi said.

But just because brain cells may be able to live indefinitely doesn’t mean humans could live forever.

Aging is dependent on more than the life span of all the individual parts in the body, and scientists still don’t understand exactly what causes people to age, Magrassi said.

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/science/2013/02/26/brain-cells-can-outlive-body/?intcmp=features#ixzz2M9COJANr

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New Cool Blog Site

Please check out this new blog site for health and wellness ideas.

arizonahealthspot.org

It looks like it is really going to be a helpful site with lots of good ideas.

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I Have the Best Doctor Ever!

I just wanted to give a shout out to my doctor, Dr. Deborah Solomon, who has taken care of me medically since 2003, despite all my unhealthy living and ups and downs.  She always takes the time to explain things, to show support, and genuinely cares.  Her staff is pretty amazing too.  I would recommend you all use her as well – but then it would be harder for me to get appointments if she gets really busy.

As some of you know, my latest health challenge is asceptic necrosis, probably caused by the steroids I took for years for asthma.  Luckily, they have non steroidal stuff now that I am on and I have lost fifty pounds.  I have another fifty to go.  Unluckily, the steroids caused bone death in my left hip and femur.  I was waiting on the results for my right hip and could not get them.  I wanted the best surgeon in town, but could not see him until late April.  So, I go to Dr. Solomon and voila, while I am there she gets my results from the other doctor, and my right hip is fine.  Then she calls and gets me an appointment with the surgeon I want – for 90 minutes after I leave her office.

She is also taking care of my pain with meds until I can get the hip fixed.  In an era where medical professionals are mostly rude and give you the bums rush, it is so refreshing to have a great doctor who will take their time to actually give you high quality care.  My doctor in 2002 through Aetna was horrible, so I won’t mention their name.  I was lucky from 1989 to 2001 to have Dr. Richard Alm with Cigna, who was also a good doctor.  They say when you move somewhere to get yourself a good doctor, a good auto mechanic, and a good lawyer.  I have one at least.

This is not my own hip, but mine looks similar in the MRI:

Note the nice round white bone on the left – that is normal, like my right femur.  The one on the right of the picture, all black and dead, that is kind of what my left one looks like.   It actually hurts more than you would think.  Kind of like a broken tooth, but all over your hip and back.  I should have the surgery some time in the late March to early May period.  Wish me luck.  No more metal detectors for me – all pat downs.  Too bad they don’t have super models at the TSA…

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