Jolie Bookspan, M.Ed, PhD, FAWMExercise and Fitness
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Junk Food Through Your Skin?

Jolie Bookspan, M.Ed, PhD, FAWM

We live part of each year in Asia. For a few months, I was posting articles for you from various villages. The town shower of one is pictured at right. Imagine what the Internet café was like.

On the flights over, our only bag was lost. US transportation security required us to check our sole knapsack, since it had a small gift for friends containing liquid. It never reappeared. We don't need "things" and it was just as easy to make our own soap, comb, and toothbrushes as carry them.

In Western stores, I am astonished by the number of "personal care items." Not just shelves full, but aisles. Each promising better hair, skin, nails, and other parts, but with ingredients that are not healthy for your body, produced in ways that pollute the world, and packaged in plastics that are unhealthy to produce, pollute when discarded, and which apparently leak chemicals into the product that can be absorbed through your skin - see Green Water. A study commissioned by the Organic Consumers Association found that even shampoos, body washes, and lotions labeled "natural" and "organic" can contain unhealthful, even carcinogenic compounds.

I feel high maintenance just carrying a toothbrush. Then we arrived without even that. What freedom.

We made simple hand sanitizer from coarse salt, rubbed between the palms.


For body, face, and hair, we picked aloe leaves, squeezed out the gel inside, and rubbed directly on - see Fast Fitness - Aloe Inside and Out. It dries non-sticky, and makes your hair shiny, clean, and healthy. We used the rest of the gel in food and drink for healthy digestion.

Bamboo is easily made into cooking pots (photo above left). We also visit our favorite bean sprout PadThai restaurant - an outdoor wok on wheels run by a friend. Paul is always popular when we travel (photo at right).

Baking soda and salt makes clean toothpaste. Even without them, a short branch called a neem stick with one end mashed until fibrous, makes a soft, effective bristled toothbrush. Neem extract is said to be a good antiseptic, and effective against various health ills and germs.

After a long day at work and after hard training, instead of hand lotion, you can rub sesame or other light healthy cooking oil onto your hands and feet. You can scent it with mint leaves, citrus peels, spices, and flowers. More ideas in Healthy Mother's Day.

I don't use sunblock, even in the tropics. I do use something to stop some of the unwanted effects of too much sun, but I do not want to block the Vitamin D and other helpful effects of sunlight. Vitamin D deficiency can lead to osteoporosis (thin, brittle bones) and osteomalacia (rubbery, demineralized bones). Vitamin D deficiency is associated with increased risk of a few types of cancer, including lung cancer. Studies find that people with low blood levels of vitamin D were more likely to have high blood pressure, cardiovascular disease, and type 2 diabetes. Another study found that a number of patients with aches and weakness were vitamin D deficient and concluded, "A lot of 'fibromyalgia' may be D deficiency."

Instead of blocking or deflecting UV rays using chemical sunblocks that may contain chemicals that I am not sure are healthy, I mix my own, that I hope stops the oxidizing effects and makes my own body better able to stop skin cancer mechanisms. I mash together fresh coconut pulp, green tea, vegetable sprouts, mashed turmeric root, and aloe gel.

A study by Johns Hopkins researchers, reported in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (October 30, 2007, vol. 104, no. 44, 17500-17505) found that rubbing an extract made from broccoli sprouts on your skin may help prevent skin cancer from high levels of ultraviolet (UV) radiation. Broccoli, and the sprouts in particular, contain a chemical called sulphoraphane, which is found to activate cancer-fighting enzymes in your own cells throughout your body, not only skin cells.

Instead of chemical anti-mosquito products, we try various things. Marigold flowers rubbed on the skin seem to work for us. I don't seem to be "sweet," and mosquitoes often ignore me while going after Paul. We have heard various theories from locals. One is that he eats sweet rice while I eat more garlic. Various grasses rubbed on the skin also work well for us. There are vines growing in Thailand with beautiful purple flowers. When you rub them on wet hair, it leaves your hair soft and shiny and sweet smelling, but the bugs do not like it. There are other vines that, when mashed with water made effective gentle soap and mosquito control combined.

In Asia, martial arts training is often more rigorous and disciplined than is common in the states. After hard evenings of training, I would sit by a candle made from oil and tightly wrapped bamboo leaves, and rub salt and oil into my, and Paul's, tired feet. Bliss.
  • You can exercise for your health. Why undo that by eating junk food - Is Your Health Food Unhealthful
  • or by adding junk food to your brain through thinking unhealthful thoughts - Healthier Heart
  • or with junk food directly through your skin.

The biggest worry for Paul is just ducking the doorways.




Photos © by Jolie

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World Vegan Day is November 1

Jolie Bookspan, M.Ed, PhD, FAWM

November 1 is World Vegan Day, and all of November is celebrated as Vegan month.

Vegans are vegetarians who don't eat, and often don't wear, any products from animals. The idea is no more unusual than not wanting to hurt, wear, or eat your pets. Vegan living can be healthier, and vegan diet can fuel both endurance and strength athletes.

Vegans and vegetarians have been found to have lower body fat on average than non-vegetarians, and lower risk of diabetes. A new study by The World Cancer Research Fund making big news as "a landmark study" found that keeping slim is one of the best ways of preventing cancer, and that evidence is stronger than previously realized that eating meat, and processed meats such as ham and bacon, increase risk of colorectal cancer. The report makes 10 recommendations including getting exercise every day, drinking water rather than sugary drinks, and eating fruit, vegetables, and fiber. There is no fiber in meat, dairy, or eggs. Vegan meals can provide enough calcium to prevent osteoporosis. See Exercise is More Important Than Calcium Supplements for Bones and Stomach Acid Drugs Increase Osteoporosis and Hip Fractures.

Vegans may promote farm sanctuaries and work for better ways than vivisection (hurtful testing on animals). The argument is not if you would rather that a child not get needed medicine rather than test on an animal, the quest is for neither to suffer, and find smarter, healthier ways for all. Significant examples exist of tests based on animal physiology that were ineffective or injurious when applied to humans in need.

Vegan bodybuilder Kenneth G. Williams is pictured above and at right. His web site is www.VeganMusclePower.org.




In the tradition of fighting monks, Chris Price is a vegan Muay Thai and mixed martial arts fighter. His web site is http://www.veganfighter.com/


Resources:
www.americanvegan.org for information about health, ahimsa, a celebration in New York City at Candle 79 Café Saturday Nov 17, and fun events including cooking classes across the U.S.
www.VeganHolidayFestival.com
www.WorldGoVeganDays.com
http://www.veganoutreach.org/whyvegan/

Recipes:
http://www.veganoutreach.org/
www.worldveganday.org has a nice summary of healthy vegan diet choices on their nutrition link.

Post link:
World Vegetarian Day October 1.

Helpful Book:
Healthy Martial Arts - Healthier training for all sports, featuring vegetarian and vegan athletes. Chapters on strength, endurance, speed, balance, nutrition, performance enhancement, injuries, building the spirit and the mind.

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Top Diabetes Treatment is Exercise

Jolie Bookspan, M.Ed, PhD, FAWM

Diabetes causes such serious health problems that the risk of death is twice as high for someone with diabetes compared to someone of similar age without. More than 20 million people in the US have diabetes (colloquially called "the sugar" disease) with 2 million a year more cases diagnosed every year. Exercise has been found to be a top factor to prevent and treat diabetes.

Three main types of diabetes are type 1, type 2, and gestational.
  • Type 1 diabetes, where the body does not make enough insulin (in the body organ called the pancreas), is treated with injected or inhaled insulin, although nutrition and exercise changes are a fundamental part of management.
  • An estimated 90–95% of cases of diabetes in North American are type 2. Type 2 diabetes is also called non insulin-dependent diabetes and obesity-related diabetes. Type 2 was rare until modern sedentary habits combined with mass sales of unhealthful food.
  • Gestational diabetes is generally a form of type 2 during pregnancy.
  • In the recent past, type 2 diabetes developed only in adults as they gained weight, reduced activity, and increased packaged, commercial, unhealthful foods. An escalating phenomenon of type 2 diabetes in children is now occurring.
  • Approximately 85% percent of adults and children diagnosed with type 2 are overweight and less active than they could be. Type 2 is increasingly being found to be best treated with more fun movement and less bad food, a win-win situation.

    Several studies have found that exercise and healthier diet are more effective than medicine for people with type 2 diabetes. A recent randomized controlled Canadian study published in the Annals of Internal Medicine found that people with type 2 diabetes who began exercising developed better blood sugar control, both from aerobic exercise and resistance training. Not exercising yielded no improvements in sugar control. People who combined aerobic exercise and also lifted weights had the biggest improvement. It is not known in this study if results occurred because of the type of exercise mattered, or because the duration of exercise was greater in the combined exercise training group. According to an editorial co-published with the study, "Doctors should prescribe exercise to all type 2 diabetes patients who are healthy enough to work out."

    In the past people with diabetes and diabetes-related complications were discouraged from exercise. However, exercise has been known in the past, with recent substantiating studies, to be the top factor to prevent and reverse diabetic problems. According to William Kraus, MD, of Duke University Medical Center, "Failing to prescribe exercise to patients with diabetes is simply unacceptable practice."

    Things To Help
    • You do not need a gym or special clothes or equipment to get aerobic or weight lifting exercise.
    • Go outdoors for a break every day that you can, for fresh air, sunshine, and fun movement.
    • For both active and resistance exercise indoors and out, remember that daily healthful movement easily accumulates from your healthy bending, balancing while dressing, taking the stairs, and other daily real life movement.
    • Have fun - skate, bowl, cycle, walk, go dancing, gardening, shoot hoops, take food to shut-ins and get them moving too, with improvised exercise of moving arms and legs, clapping, singing, and having fun.
    • For fun exercise-as-lifestyle ideas, check through lists of Fitness Fixer posts, linked at the right of each article.
    • For better nutritional mindset, click A Little Good Exercise, a Lot of Bad Food - Overweight Still No Mystery. Then for specific recipes and methods click the nutrition label under this and related posts.
    • My post Hyperbarics for Diabetic Foot Injury gives more information on preventing amputations from diabetic wounds, and lists some of the ways that exercise reverses the contributors and complications of diabetes.

    There is great hope. Have fun making a new healthier life.

    healed photo by Kolleggerium

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    Hyperbarics for Diabetic Foot Injury

    Jolie Bookspan, M.Ed, PhD, FAWM

    It is estimated that every 30 seconds someone in the world has their foot amputated because of a diabetic foot ulcer. Reduced blood supply to the feet and lower legs in people with diabetes delays wound healing and increases infection and chance of gangrene. Foot infection worsens the situation of inadequate blood supply by increasing the area's need for oxygen but decreasing blood supply. Poor blood supply further decreases ability to fight infection. Diabetic ulcers treated with antibiotics can become colonized with drug-resistant bugs.

    I am at the annual meeting of the Undersea and Hyperbaric Medical Society (UHMS). Several interesting studies are being presented on diabetic wound healing. Enhancement of healing in selected problem wounds is one of the 13 approved indications for use of hyperbaric oxygen therapy as defined by the Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy Committee. Hyperbaric treatments are done by putting the entire person in a small room or chamber and increasing the pressure inside so that the person breathes oxygen at higher pressure than what you are breathing now. The post Does Hyperbaric Oxygen Help Exercise Ability? explains more of how it works.

    One of the studies presented here looked at 50 patients with severe diabetic foot ulcers. Half were treated with hyperbaric oxygen therapy (age and gender matched with the half who did not). Diabetic patients treated with hyperbaric oxygen had 56% chance of healing and 16% chance of amputation. Diabetic patients not receiving hyperbaric oxygen therapy had a 32% chance of healing and a 32% chance of amputation. Supplying oxygen to compromised areas, such as diabetic wounds, is important to restoring health. Hyperbaric oxygen is established to help that.

    From the President's Competition came another study on hyperbaric oxygen therapy and stem cell mobilization in people with diabetes. This study was by researchers at the University of Pennsylvania's Institute for Environmental Medicine, where I did nine years of my research in diving medicine. Hyperbaric oxygen is already known to mobilize bone marrow stem cells in animals, healthy humans, and in patients with a history of radiation exposure. This study looked at diabetic patients with refractory foot ulcers or radiation necrosis who were receiving hyperbaric oxygen treatments. The study was small and results varied more than in previous trials. However, the researchers reported that overall, hyperbaric oxygen therapy increased circulating CD34+ stem cells three-fold in the patients with diabetics, and was shown to play a role in wound healing. Three patients of twelve in the study group did not increase stem cells. The researchers said that the reason for no increase should be investigated.

    In the exhibit hall of the hyperbaric conference, various companies display their fun oximetry units. There are several kinds of oximeters. The most common ones painlessly assess oxygen levels through the skin. Oximetry is used to assess oxygen available to the injured and surrounding tissue, and to tell how well hyperbaric oxygen treatments are working to improve oxygenation and new blood vessel growth. I like to try them all on, on different parts of my body. I experiment with different exercises to see the different effects on oxygenating different areas. Movement makes rapid, effective increases in oxygen levels.

    In the past, people with diabetes were cautioned not to exercise because it was felt that they would injure themselves. Now it's known that exercise is an important part of preventing injuries from diabetes, and preventing or curbing diabetes itself. Regular exercise:
    • Helps your body burn more sugar.
    • Increases the number of insulin receptors on your cells and increases the sensitivity of your body to insulin.
    • Helps your body grow new blood vessels and improve circulation.
    • Improves oxygen levels to areas to help them heal.
    • Reduces high blood fat levels (cholesterol and triglycerides) which leads to early aging of blood vessels.
    • Increases blood flow to the feet, which helps prevent diabetic foot problems.
    Keep moving for many aspects of preventing disease, secondary effects from disease, and to improve your health.


    Here is the next post from the conference Exercise and Fitness in Decompression Sickness Risk.


    Photo by yngrich

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