Relief for your back is at hand

February 15th, 2010
By Linda J. Buch and Kristen Browning-Blas
The Denver Post

(The Denver Post)

Your back hurts. Is it because of tightened muscles, thickened connective tissue or blocked energy? Depends on whom you ask, but if you seek out alternatives to traditional Western medical treatment, you will be in good company. About four in 10 adults (and one in nine children) use some form of what the government calls complementary and alternative medicine (CAM).

Through its Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine, the National Institutes of Health studies a wide variety of nontraditional and non-Western treatments, including herbs and supplements, energy medicine, massage and other manipulative, body-based practices.

The center has found that American adults are most likely to seek out alternative treatments for musculoskeletal problems such as back, neck or joint pain. For detailed information on hundreds of treatments and topics, go to nccam.nih.gov. Here’s a sampling of hands-on treatments in Denver:

Massage

An experienced certified massage therapist is trained to deal with muscle and tissue dysfunction through hands-on soft-tissue manipulation that both relaxes and improves blood flow to the affected area and the body as a whole.

Massage can be effective preventive medicine, say therapists. Tess Gallegos, a Denver massage and skin-care specialist, says massage also improves posture and body mechanics.

“The goal of a massage therapist is for the client to leave with an understanding of back pain and to feel more in control,” says Gallegos. “Massage is not just relaxing, it can actually change the structure of the body and get to the bottom of the cause of the pain.”

Swedish massage specialist Stefan Paulsson explains that tight muscles pull on the skeleton where the muscle is attached. The body then compensates for the short, tight muscle in another part of the body, causing pain.

“A contracted muscle has poor blood flow; relaxing it improves blood flow,” says Paulsson, who owns Back In Shape in the Commons Park neighborhood downtown. “Keep soft tissue soft, relaxed and with good blood flow, and fewer problems arise.”

Rolfing.

Developed by Ph.D. biochemist Ida P. Rolf more than 60 years ago, Rolfing is the process of examining and reorganizing the connective tissues that envelop the entire body. “Connective tissue provides support for the entire body,” says Marekah Stewart, a certified advanced Rolfer. “It encases all of the body’s systems — muscle, organs, bones — all of them.”

When you combine gravity with any illness or trauma (physical or emotional) the connective tissue thickens, shortens and becomes “stuck,” and we begin to compensate, says Stewart.

The head may pull forward, the shoulders may become rounded, and imbalances in the hips and pelvic girdle may occur. Because of its plasticity, connective tissue responds to warmth and pressure, so Rolfers manually free up the connective tissue over a series of 10 sessions.

“If one area is affected, others are impacted, the ultimate goal being to bring the head, shoulders, thorax, pelvis and legs back to a more vertical alignment,” says Stewart. “Rolfing can provide more freedom of movement, function, flexibility, and the sense of being integrated, giving one more energy and balance.”

Acupuncture

Practiced in China and throughout Asia for thousands of years, acupuncture stimulates specific points on the body, most commonly through thin metal needles inserted into the skin. The acupuncture points are on pathways, called meridians, along which the life force (qi) flows, and stimulating them is thought to remove blockages in the flow of qi.

While the National Institutes of Health places it in the complementary and alternative medicine category, acupuncture is one of the most-studied alternative practices. The American Pain Society and the American College of Physicians say doctors should consider acupuncture, among other complementary and alternative therapies, for patients with chronic low-back pain that does not respond to conventional treatment.

A clinical trial reported in May 2009 that actual acupuncture and simulated acupuncture were equally effective — and both were more effective than conventional treatment — for relieving chronic low-back pain, says the National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine.

Patty Wang and Henry Cao have been practicing acupuncture in Colorado for 15 years, since they moved here from China, where Wang practiced acupuncture and Cao was an orthopedic surgeon. In their Denver practice, Wang does most of the acupuncture, and her husband, Cao, works with herbs and uses his surgical knowledge to diagnose and prescribe exercises.

“Acupuncture can help relax soft tissue from a muscle spasm, muscle imbalance, arthritis, or herniated disk, but cannot restore the lost cartilage due to arthritis or repair a herniated disk,” says Cao.

Reiki

Based on the idea of a universal energy that can support the body’s healing abilities, Reiki is a Japanese practice that gained popularity in the United States in the 1930s. Pronounced RAY-kee, the word comes from the Japanese words rei, or universal, and ki, life energy. Practitioners place their hands lightly on or above the client’s body, in order to channel that energy and facilitate healing.

The National Institutes of Health includes Reiki in the complementary and alternative medicine category, and is funding studies on its usefulness in treating symptoms of advanced AIDS, prostate cancer, and nerve pain and cardiovascular risk in people with Type 2 diabetes. A study published in 2008 found that neither direct nor distant Reiki affected the pain of fibromyalgia.

Although not licensed or regulated, Reiki training has three levels, taught by a master, a practitioner who has reached the highest level.

Reiki master Regan Peschel says in the case of back pain, energy blockages could contribute to the injury, she says.

“With physical pain, half the time is spent sending healing energy to that spot,” says Peschel, who believes we all have the ability to connect with healing energy and to self-heal.

Yoga

“There is a misconception that ‘yoga’ only means get on a mat and be a pretzel,” says Lisa Eller Davis, a Denver yoga teacher and Reiki master. People in pain are often afraid, she says, and stress from that pain makes the pain worse.

“First I use breathing and mind/body awareness to calm the fear,” says Eller Davis. “Breathing oxygenates the body and relieves tension.” Gentle yoga postures and movements — some as simple as changing the position of the head and neck — open the mind and calm the body, she says.

Then, people can begin coordinating body postures with breathing techniques. “Body follows mind, and mind follows breath,” says Eller Davis.

In addition to breathing and relaxation techniques, yoga can be practiced seated, standing and reclining.

“There is a yoga for any body,” Eller Davis says. “With some back injuries, physical yoga movements are not the best place to start; the person should be evaluated by a physician before beginning any yoga program.”

Yoga can adapt, align, strengthen and stretch limbs, and release tension in the head, neck and shoulders, all of which help in the healing process.

Exercise/strength training with Pilates

Personal trainer David Bartlett asks clients to perform exercises like rollups and un-weighted squats. He watches for moves that cause the pain to kick in.

By using strength-training techniques, while challenging balance on a wobble board, FitBall, BOSU, or Coreboard, Bartlett’s clients have reduced or even eliminated pain, he says.

“The goal is the fluid integration of range of motion, speed, length of lever and proper breathing,” Bartlett says. “When people can do this with reduced or no pain, their confidence, co-ordination, and balance all improve as well.”

He says there’s more to developing back strength than “core work” — the pelvic floor muscles, back and abdominals must be strengthened without stressing the area of the back that is under duress.

“I get the best results when strength or resistance training is combined with Pilates, using primarily Polestar Pilates principles and Balanced Body equipment,” he explains. “Pilates strengthens, tones, elongates, and stretches all the muscles in the body — some all at the same time.”

This information is brought to you by Dr. XiPing Zhou, M.D.O.M., L.Ac. Dr. Zhou is founder & president of East West Healing Arts Institute Massage School, Dr. Zhou’s Acupuncture & Pain Management Clinic, Madison Family Wellness Community Clinic,  The Herbal Palace, & China Delight Tours. Visit anyone of these websites to learn about Chinese medicine and culture.

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Med Students Say Conventional Medicine Would Benefit by Integrating Alternative Therapies

February 10th, 2010

Newswise — In the largest national survey of its kind, researchers from UCLA and UC San Diego measured medical students’ attitudes and beliefs about complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) and found that three-quarters of them felt conventional Western medicine would benefit by integrating more CAM therapies and ideas.

The findings will be published in the online issue of Evidence-based Complementary and Alternative Medicine (eCAM) on January 20, 2010.

“Complementary and alternative medicine is receiving increased attention in light of the global health crisis and the significant role of traditional medicine in meeting public health needs in developing countries,” said study author Ryan Abbott, a researcher at the UCLA Center for East-West Medicine. “Integrating CAM into mainstream health care is now a global phenomenon, with policy makers at the highest levels endorsing the importance of a historically marginalized form of health care.”

CAM, which includes therapies such as massage, yoga, herbal medicine and acupuncture, is characterized by a holistic and highly individualized approach to patient care. It’s emphasis is on maximizing the body’s inherent healing ability; getting patients involved as active participants in their own care; addressing the physical, mental and spiritual attributes of a disease; and preventive care. While interest in these fields has increased dramatically in the United States in recent years, information about such therapies has not yet been widely integrated into medical education.

“Even with the high prevalence of CAM use today, most physicians still know little about non-conventional forms of medicine,” said study author Michael S. Goldstein, Ph.D., a senior research scientist at the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research and professor of Public Health and Sociology, UCLA. “Investigating medical students’ attitudes and knowledge will help us assess whether this may change in the future.”

The team of UCLA and UC San Diego experts in the fields of CAM, integrative medicine, Western medicine, medical education and survey development created a novel 30-question survey and sent it to 126 medical schools throughout the United States. In return, the team received 1,770 completed surveys from a pool of about 68,000 medical students nationwide, roughly three percent.

While the current results offer valuable insight into medical students’ perceptions of CAM, given the low response rate, researchers plan future studies to further refine the tool and see if the findings can be more generalized.

Researchers found that although medical students endorsed the importance of complementary and alternative medicine, obstacles remain that may prevent future doctors from recommending these treatments in their practices. According to the findings:

• 77 percent of participants agreed to some extent that patients whose doctors know about complementary and alternative medicine in addition to conventional medicine, benefit more than those whose doctors are only familiar with Western medicine.
• 74 percent of participants agreed to some extent that a system of medicine that integrates therapies of conventional and complementary and alternative medicine would be more effective than either type of medicine provided independently.
• 84 percent of participants agreed to some extent that the field contains beliefs, ideas, and therapies from which conventional medicine could benefit.
• 49 percent of participating medical students indicated that they have used complementary and alternative treatments however few would recommend or use these treatments in their practice until more scientific assessment has occurred.

“Our research suggests that persuading doctors to integrate CAM will require investment in the types of clinical research that form the backbone of Western medicine,” adds Abbott. “Even now, medical schools have the opportunity to train the next generation of medical practitioners in health care systems outside of conventional medicine. Core values of CAM can help students develop a more holistic and individualized approach to patient care.”

The study also found that the further along in school the student was, the more likely they were to believe their learning regarding CAM therapies was sufficient. Still, researchers note that more than 60 percent of participants favored more education related to this field during their time in medical school. Although more than half of all U.S. medical schools currently offer some type of CAM course, researchers say these courses could be augmented or streamlined into more formal, standardized curricula.

“Although the content of integrative medicine programs remains controversial, medical schools across the country are moving forward with ambitious new programs to teach the next generation of health care leaders,” said Dr. Ka Kit Hui, Wallis Annenberg Chair in Integrative East-West Medicine at UCLA, founder and director, UCLA Center for East-West Medicine, and chair, of UCLA’s Collaborative Centers for Integrative Medicine. “Through the Collaborative Centers for Integrative Medicine, UCLA has become one of the nation’s leading academic centers for integrative medical education. UCLA offers training programs for health sciences students and residents, as well as fellowships for clinicians and researchers.”

Hui added that the importance of integrative medical education is increasingly being realized outside of UCLA. Forty-four highly esteemed academic medical centers now comprise the Consortium of Academic Health Centers for Integrative Medicine, which was established to advance the principles and practices of integrative health care within academic institutions. It provides a community of support for academic missions and a collective voice for influencing change. The Consortium also helps disseminate evidence-based information on CAM, informs health care policy, and supports medical education.

The study was funded by the National Institutes of Health, the Gerald Oppenheimer Family Foundation, and the Annenberg Foundation.

Source: University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), Health Sciences

This information is brought to you by Dr. XiPing Zhou, M.D.O.M., L.Ac. Dr. Zhou is founder & president of East West Healing Arts Institute Massage School, Dr. Zhou’s Acupuncture & Pain Management Clinic, Madison Family Wellness Community Clinic,  The Herbal Palace, & China Delight Tours. Visit anyone of these websites to learn about Chinese medicine and culture.

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Acupuncture’s effects on the brain

February 8th, 2010

A new study about the effects of acupuncture on the brain may shed light on the complex mechanisms of this Eastern healing technique.
Acupuncture is a traditional Chinese method in which thin needles are inserted into the skin at selected spots to treat various ailments. The study, conducted by researchers at the University of York and the Hull York Medical School, indicates that acupuncture has a significant effect on specific neural structures.

When a patient receives acupuncture treatment, a sensation called deqi can be obtained, scientific analysis shows that this deactivates areas within the brain that are associated with the processing of pain. “These results provide objective scientific evidence that acupuncture has specific effects within the brain which hopefully will lead to a better understanding of how acupuncture works,” Dr Hugh MacPherson, of the Complementary Medicine Research Group in the University’s Department of Health Sciences, said.

Neuroscientist Dr Aziz Asghar, of the York Neuroimaging Centre and the Hull York Medical School, said, “The results are fascinating. Whether such brain deactivations constitute a mechanism which underlies or contributes to the therapeutic effect of acupuncture is an intriguing possibility which requires further research.”

Source: The Times of India

This information is brought to you by Dr. XiPing Zhou, M.D.O.M., L.Ac. Dr. Zhou is founder & president of East West Healing Arts Institute Massage School, Dr. Zhou’s Acupuncture & Pain Management Clinic, Madison Family Wellness Community Clinic,  The Herbal Palace, & China Delight Tours. Visit anyone of these websites to learn about Chinese medicine and culture.

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Acupuncture is effective in reducing depression during pregnancy.

February 5th, 2010

A study that was presented today at the Society for Maternal-Fetal Medicine’s (SMFM) annual Pregnancy MeetingTM in Chicago, will show new findings that acupuncture can be effective in treating depression during pregnancy.

Dr. Schnyer, one of the study’s authors explains that having depression while pregnant is a very concerning issue due to the negative effects is can have on both the mother, the baby and the whole family in general.

As many as 20% of women experience increased depression symptoms during pregnancy, and about 10% meet the criteria for major depression. Studies dedicated to depression during pregnancy are far fewer than those there are for the postpartum period.

For this study, 150 participants that met the criteria for Major Depressive Disorder were randomly given depression specific acupuncture (SPEC, n=52) or one of two active controls which consisted of either control acupuncture (CTRL, n=49) or massage (MSSG, n=49). The participants were administered the treatments for 12 sessions in eight weeks.

The results showed that women who received SPEC had considerably greater decrease in the severity of their depression when compared to the combined control groups, or CTRL acupuncture alone. The SPEC group participants also had a higher response rate than the other two controls combined, or the SPEC participants alone. Mild and temporary side effects were reported by 43 out of the 150 participants.

The results acquired in the study clearly show that acupuncture could be an effective treatment for depression during pregnancy, concluded Dr. Schnyer.

Compiled from materials provided by the Society for Maternal-Fetal Medicine through EurekAlert!.

This information is brought to you by Dr. XiPing Zhou, M.D.O.M., L.Ac. Dr. Zhou is founder & president of East West Healing Arts Institute Massage School, Dr. Zhou’s Acupuncture & Pain Management Clinic, Madison Family Wellness Community Clinic,  The Herbal Palace, & China Delight Tours. Visit anyone of these websites to learn about Chinese medicine and culture.

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Massage Therapy Eases Post-Surgical Pain

February 4th, 2010

A Mayo Clinic study conducted over a period of five months, showed so much of a reduction in post-surgical pain, they hired a full-time massage therapist to be available for patients after heart surgery. Approximately half of the 58 patients who participated in this original pilot study received massage. On a 10-point scale of pain, those who received massage had a mean pain score of less than one, while those who did not receive massage had an average score of three. In addition to the massage therapy, the Mayo Clinic has been looking into the advantages of other complementary therapies, including ambient music and guided imagery, both of which have shown to have a positive effect of patients recovering from surgery.

The Department of Veterans Affairs, VA Ann Arbor and Indianapolis Healthcare Systems conducted an even larger study involving 605 veterans, male and female, over a period of two years who had undergone major surgery (thoracic or abdominal). They were assigned to one of three groups. Approximately one third received routine care, as well as a daily 20-minute effleurage back massage each evening for up to five days. A second group got individualized attention, but no massage; and the remaining group got only standard routine care.

The purpose of the study was to see how massage and/or individualized support affected recovery after major surgery. Compared to the groups who received no massage, those who did receive massage experienced a faster rate of decreased pain intensity, pain unpleasantness and a reduction in anxiety in the first four days after surgery.

SOURCE: Intergrative Healthcare

This information is brought to you by Dr. XiPing Zhou, M.D.O.M., L.Ac. Dr. Zhou is founder & president of East West Healing Arts Institute Massage School, Dr. Zhou’s Acupuncture & Pain Management Clinic, Madison Family Wellness Community Clinic,  The Herbal Palace, & China Delight Tours. Visit anyone of these websites to learn about Chinese medicine and culture.

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Massage, rolfing help ease pain

February 2nd, 2010

Also, spinal manipulation and Rolfing, apart from the Alexander technique and the Feldenkrais method can have great effect. The January issue of Mayo Clinic Women’s HealthSource discusses these methods in detail.

Massage
It involves applying pressure to the body’s soft tissues by rubbing, kneading or rolling. In deep tissue massage, the deeper layers of muscle and connective tissue are manipulated. Another approach focuses on trigger points, where in muscle ‘knots’ that are painful are pressed.

Spinal manipulation
This therapy is a treatment for restricted spinal mobility. It ensures that the spinal movement is restored. A controlled force or thrust is applied to a joint of the spine. Also, known as spinal adjustment it can provide long-term or short-term relief.

Rolfing
Rolfing manipulates the fascia, the protective tissue surrounding the muscles. The practitioner uses hands, knuckles, thumbs, elbows and knees to manipulate the patient’s tissues aiming to improve posture and realign the body.

Alexander technique and Feldenkrais method
These therapies use touch and direction to help the patient become more aware of movement. An Alexander session might begin with the patient seated in a chair. The practitioner helps the patient adjust head, neck and spine positions. With Feldenkrais, the patient may be lying down, sitting on a chair or standing. Researchers feel the Alexander technique can provide long-term relief for back pain.

SOURCE: The Times of India

This information is brought to you by Dr. XiPing Zhou, M.D.O.M., L.Ac. Dr. Zhou is founder & president of East West Healing Arts Institute Massage School, Dr. Zhou’s Acupuncture & Pain Management Clinic, Madison Family Wellness Community Clinic,  The Herbal Palace, & China Delight Tours. Visit anyone of these websites to learn about Chinese medicine and culture.

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Back killing you? Try kyphoplasty

January 28th, 2010
Greenport doctor Frank Adipietro injects surgical cement into the damaged vertebrae of an 87-year-old woman suffering from chronic back pain for years. The procedure, called kyphoplasty, was recently criticized by the New England Journal of Medicine.

A few weeks ago, Marian Geoghan’s back started killing her.

The 87-year-old resident of Peconic Landing in Greenport said she’d suffered from back pain on and off for years, but only recently did it take a turn for the worse. She wasn’t sure what was causing it, but she knew she didn’t want to go through any major surgery.

She also didn’t want to take measures such as massage or acupuncture that could be too conservative to ease her chronic pain. Ms. Geoghan said she had learned that lesson about three years ago, when she let a fractured rib heal on its own.

“I was laid up for three months in the summertime,” she said. “There wasn’t much I could do for it other than painkillers and rest.”

Her solution this time around was to see Dr. Frank Adipietro, interventional pain management specialist at Eastern Long Island Hospital in Greenport. He recommended that Ms. Geoghan go through a minimally invasive surgical procedure for spinal bone fractures called balloon kyphoplasty.

“This lady has a history of compression fractures,” he said before the surgery last Friday. “Right now, she has one that has been troubling her for weeks, and it’s been very painful.”

‘We can take a patient who has been in complete pain and get her right back on her feet.’ Dr. Frank Adipietro, Eastern Long Island HospitalOsteoporosis causes more than 700,000 spinal fractures each year in the U.S., more than twice the annual number of hip fractures, according to the National Osteoporosis Foundation. Because of the complexity of back pain, Dr. Adipietro added, about two-thirds of these fractures go undiagnosed or untreated. But once the correct diagnosis is made, kyphoplasty can take away back pain almost immediately, the doctor said.

“This is a situation where we can take a patient who has been in complete pain and get her right back on her feet within 24 hours and living a regular lifestyle, which is the whole key to these pain management procedures,” he said. Ms. Geoghan “has a new fracture which has not been healing on its own, in fact it’s getting worse. She’s the perfect candidate for this type of procedure.”

During the 20-minute surgery — which requires only a light sedative for the patient — cement is injected into the fractured bone through tiny tubes while balloons open up tiny cavities in the bone that the cement can go into safely, he said.

“With other techniques, where you don’t use a balloon, the cement spreads straight into the bone and can sometimes go in a haphazard way,” Dr. Adipietro said. “And what causes the pain is the microfractures of the bone. The cement takes about an hour to cure, then it stabilizes the fractures in the bone and the pain goes away.”

Patients who sign up for kyphoplasty range from the elderly to the “16-year-old cheerleader who herniated a disk to the long distance runner in his 20s to people in car accidents,” Dr. Adipietro said. “Anyone who needs pain management.”

Kyphoplasty — and a similar procedure called vertebroplasty, which is also offered at Eastern Long Island Hospital — recently came under fire from a clinical study published in the New England Journal of Medicine. The study found a lack of data to support the claim that the procedure will result in an “immediate and sustained reduction in pain.”

“Not only is the short-term efficacy of vertebroplasty unproven,” the Journal reported, “but there are also several uncontrolled studies suggesting that vertebroplasty may increase the risk of subsequent vertebral fractures, particularly in vertebrae that are adjacent to treated levels, and sometimes after cement has leaked into the adjacent disks.”

Dr. Adipietro called the study, which was reported in The New York Times, “unfortunate.”

“Here’s all these people with broken bones, and they don’t know what to do,” he said. “What can happen after the procedure is that the pain caused by the bone fracture goes away but different types of pain associated with standard back issues then begin to pop up. Researchers obviously picked this topic and said, ‘OK, does this work better than conservative measures?’ Well, those of us who do the procedure almost on a daily or weekly basis can tell you that we have patients out there that would be in chronic pain if this procedure were not done.”

Minimally invasive surgery is always better than the old methods of “opening the back up” to fix a fractured bone, Dr. Adipietro added.

“Sometimes people would be in body casts for three to six months,” he said.

In Dr. Adipietro’s view, having the procedure done when a person is already in chronic pain can’t hurt — because it isn’t going to get worse after the quick and simple operation, he said.

Two days after her operation, Ms. Geoghan said that she wasn’t quite comfortable yet but she wasn’t in as much pain as she had been three weeks before.

“It’s day by day,” she said. “Today is better than the day before. Hopefully by the end of the week I’ll feel much better.”

SOURCE: The Suffolk Times

This information is brought to you by Dr. XiPing Zhou, M.D.O.M., L.Ac. Dr. Zhou is founder & president of East West Healing Arts Institute Massage School, Dr. Zhou’s Acupuncture & Pain Management Clinic, Madison Family Wellness Community Clinic,  The Herbal Palace, & China Delight Tours. Visit anyone of these websites to learn about Chinese medicine and culture.

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Massage Reduces Depression in Pregnant Women

January 26th, 2010

New research shows massage therapy reduced depression in pregnant women, and also reduced the incidence of massaged women’s babies being born prematurely.

The study was conducted by researchers at the Touch Research Institutes, where pioneering research about massage has been conducted since 1992.

Pregnant women diagnosed with major depression were given 12 weeks of massage, twice per week, by their significant other. A control group did not receive massage, according to an abstract published on www.pubmed.gov.

The massage-therapy group versus the control group not only had reduced depression by the end of the massage-therapy period, they also had reduced depression and cortisol levels during the postpartum period.

The massaged women’s newborns were also less likely to be born prematurely and low birthweight, pubmed noted, and they had lower cortisol levels and performed better on the Brazelton Neonatal Behavioral Assessment habituation, orientation and motor scales.

SOURCE: Massage Mag

This information is brought to you by Dr. XiPing Zhou, M.D.O.M., L.Ac. Dr. Zhou is founder & president of East West Healing Arts Institute Massage School, Dr. Zhou’s Acupuncture & Pain Management Clinic, Madison Family Wellness Community Clinic,  The Herbal Palace, & China Delight Tours. Visit anyone of these websites to learn about Chinese medicine and culture.

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Infant massage offers many benefits for parents and babies

January 21st, 2010

Cultures all over the world have used massage as part of baby care for hundreds of years, and research shows it to be very beneficial.

Massaging your little one enables you to learn about and respond to the infant’s body language, and is also a wonderful way to create a sense of safety and security by showing that he or she is loved and cared for.

But the relaxing activity does more than foster a close and confident mother-infant relationship. It can provide relief from colic, wind, and constipation, too.

You may wonder if babies really need massage to relax. The answer is yes, because not all infants know how to rest. Just like us, they can get stressed, in addition to being fussy, disorganised, crying a great deal and having poor sleeping habits. Massage can alleviate all these behaviours.

There is no set way to massage your baby. Provided you know how to do it safely, you and your youngster will discover what’s best for you both.

You should keep in mind, however, that massage is something to do with, rather than to, your baby.

Benefits for the child:

- Smooth the transition from the womb to the world
- Introduce baby to his or her first language: touch
- Create a feeling of being loved, respected and secure
- Teach positive, loving touch
- Develop body, mind, awareness and coordination
- Help regulate and strengthen baby’s digestive and respiratory systems and stimulate circulatory and nervous systems
- Reduce ‘fussiness’ and improve quality of sleep
- Enhance skin condition

Advantages for parents:

- Better understand baby’s non-verbal communication
- Enhance parental confidence and competence
- Help with postnatal depression
- Promote lactation in breastfeeding mums (through stimulation of hormones)
- Boost the nurturing instinct (through stimulation of hormone oxytocin)

Certified Infant Massage Instructors (CIMI), trained with the International Association of Infant Massage (IAIM), teach courses taught over a number of weeks to give both the parent and baby time to learn and become accustomed to massage.

Each week, the class focuses on a new part of the body but also repeats previous demonstrations for reinforcement.

The strokes and styles of infant massage are easier to grasp when demonstrated by experienced instructors. Some skills and topics covered are pressure, rate, rhythm, length of massage, respect and bonding.

SOURCE: hellomagazine.com

This information is brought to you by Dr. XiPing Zhou, M.D.O.M., L.Ac. Dr. Zhou is founder & president of East West Healing Arts Institute Massage School, Dr. Zhou’s Acupuncture & Pain Management Clinic, Madison Family Wellness Community Clinic,  The Herbal Palace, & China Delight Tours. Visit anyone of these websites to learn about Chinese medicine and culture.

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Classes gently help parents get in touch with baby-massage techniques

January 20th, 2010
Maggie Moran age 4 months, was fidgeting during a recent infant massage class until her mom gently stroked the toddler’s feet and legs, cooing, “I know. …I love you.”

The two were learning how helpful the gentle manipulation of muscle and connective tissue can be at classes held at a cloth-diaper store in Orland Park.

“It was relaxing for both of us, and I can definitely see how it could benefit her,” said mother Sheila Moran.

That is the reaction Silvia Gonzalez, who teaches infant massage at Cutie Poops and Bottoms, was hoping for. Gonzalez said massage has a host of benefits, including stimulating blood circulation, digestion and respiration, easing colic and encouraging relaxation. Parents’ verbal and physical cues during massage can also help toddlers develop communication skills.

A healthier, happier baby can make parents’ lives easier, too, said Gonzalez.

“It’s two-way. The parent really, really connects with the baby. It’s a way to bond, and it offers all these health benefits,” said Gonzalez, who is certified in infant massage.

The four-week class starts with introductions and pregnancy experiences. After positioning the baby on a blanket on the floor, parents –– usually mothers –– do a short relaxation exercise, taking a deep breath and visualizing themselves in a favorite place.

But before letting parents touch their babies, Gonzalez, who demonstrates massage on a lifelike doll, tells parents to ask their babies’ permission, first rubbing their hands together to show that touching is about to begin.

“We respect the babies and follow their leads,” said Gonzalez, explaining if babies are crying, she usually eases into the massage.

The first class focuses on massaging the legs and feet — less sensitive spots on the body for babies new to massage –– with grape seed oil. Moms and dads learn to massage their babies’ hands, arms, chests, stomachs and faces in later classes.

Gonzalez spends the latter part of each class discussing parents’ experiences with their babies and their own childhoods. She also shares studies that tout the benefits of baby massage. She ends with an uplifting poem, sometimes from the perspective of a baby.

Caregivers with babies age three weeks to 12 months are welcome in the class. Gonzalez also teaches baby massage and infant exercises in Mokena, where she lives, through her company, Wee Play and Relax.

The classes, taught in a relaxed atmosphere, with soothing music playing in the background, welcome family members and friends to observe as well.

Jared Edwards and Sherri Edwards, who owns the store, each massaged one of their 7-month-old twins, Gavin and Blake, during the class, their babies looking peaceful and relaxed throughout.

Dr. Laverne Barnes, an osteopath and family practitioner in Posen, who is on staff at Advocate South Suburban Hospital, said she regularly massages newborns and encourages the practice to help babies unwind, sleep better and be more alert during the day.

“It actually promotes a sense of security and reminds them of being in the womb,” Barnes said.

Copyright © 2010, Chicago Tribune

This information is brought to you by Dr. XiPing Zhou, M.D.O.M., L.Ac. Dr. Zhou is founder & president of East West Healing Arts Institute Massage School, Dr. Zhou’s Acupuncture & Pain Management Clinic, Madison Family Wellness Community Clinic,  The Herbal Palace, & China Delight Tours. Visit anyone of these websites to learn about Chinese medicine and culture.

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