Wednesday, March 4, 2015

WELLNESS WEDNESDAY: Health Benefits Of Massage


The Health Benefits of Massages

There’s nothing that says relaxation and indulgence more than getting a massage. Getting a soothing massage can help you unwind and forget your stresses for a bit, but that’s not all it can do for you.
The term “massage” is a general description for pressing, rubbing and manipulating your skin, muscles, tendons and ligaments. During a massage, a massage therapist will typically use their hands and fingers, but they may also use their forearms and elbows to apply a range of light stroking to deep pressure.
These varying levels of pressure depend on the type of massage. A Swedish massage is a more gentle form, including long strokes, kneading, deep circular movements and tapping with the focus on relaxing and energizing you. Contrastingly, a deep massage includes slower, more forceful strokes that target the deeper layers of your muscles and connective tissues. Deep massages commonly help those dealing with muscle damage from injuries. When someone suffers a sports injury, they can take advantage of a sports massage, which is similar to a Swedish massage, to treat and prevent future injuries. Similarly, a trigger point massage focuses on tight muscle fibers that can form after injuries or overuse.
Studies have backed up the benefit of massages for pain. Massages can help people struggling with back pain feel and function better. In fact, one study shows that massages reduced the need for painkillers by 36 percent for those suffering from persistent low back pain.
Other research found massage helps with osteoarthritis of the knee pain, fibromyalgia and nerve pain.
Massages can address another kind of pain too – headaches. Regular massages can help reduce the number of migraines a person has, and it can also reduce how painful each migraine is. One study found that a 30-minute massage decreased the pain of tension headaches and even curbed some of the stress and anger associated with a bad headache.
Massages can also soothe your anxiety and depression – they reduce your levels of cortisol, the stress hormone. Reducing cortisol not only makes you feel better emotionally, but it can also contribute to lowering blood pressure. Massages can also trigger the release of serotonin and dopamine, which can help ease depression.
When people are going through traditional treatments for cancer, massage may be used to complement it. Massage has been used to not only promote relaxation in cancer patients, but also to reduce the symptoms and side effects of the treatment. It can help reduce pain, swelling, fatigue, nausea and feelings of depression.
Some studies have shown that massages may even keep you healthy. Massages may give your immune system a boost by increasing the activity levels of your T cells, which ward off viruses.
With all of the health benefits, both mental and physical, you no longer have to feel like massages are an overindulgent luxury – they’re actually improving your overall wellbeing.

Monday, March 2, 2015

FITNESS FEATURE: Strength Training At Home

Strength Training at Home

Strength training improves muscle strength, power, endurance, and size. It also reduces your body fat, increases your body metabolism so you burn more calories each day, enhances your balance and stability, and keeps your bones strong. It also can reduce the symptoms associated with chronic conditions, such as arthritis, diabetes, or osteoporosis.  
Getting to the gym for a weight workout isn't always easy, however. That's why it pays to have weights at home as a backup, or even as a substitute.

The basics

Strength training, also known as resistance training, is different from weightlifting or power lifting. These are sports in which people compete to lift the heaviest weights.
In resistance or strength training, you use weights or resistance bands to force your muscles to work against gravity. Over time, this builds and strengthens muscle mass by increasing the size of your muscle cells. During the first four weeks of a strength-training program, the increase in your strength is primarily from changes in the neurologic system that controls your muscle contraction. The nervous system increases the number of muscle fibers used for training and coordinates their activity, but muscle fibers remain the same size. After about four weeks, changes take place in the structure of your muscle fibers, so they enlarge and your muscles become larger.
Talk with your health care provider before starting a strength-training program. Once you have your provider's okay, talk with a qualified personal trainer to set up a program. If your goal is to increase your strength, then you should use progressively heavier weights in your training sessions. If your goal is to improve your muscle endurance, then you should use lighter weights with more repetitions in your training sessions.

Why it's important

Strength training is an important part of a fitness routine, because your muscles must be strong enough for daily activities, such as carrying groceries or gardening, as well as for recreational and sports activities, such as walking or carrying golf clubs. As you age, you lose muscle mass and strength. Strength training helps delay and reduce this loss of muscle.
The National Institute on Aging offers these tips for strength training:
  • Your strength-training program should work all the major muscle groups at least twice a week.
  • Warm up your muscles for five to 10 minutes before beginning your weight workout, with gentle exercises. Follow your workout with a cool down of five to 10 minutes and gentle stretching. There should be at least one day of rest between your sessions to allow your muscles to grow and heal.
  • Use a minimum of weight the first week. Starting out with weights that are too heavy can cause injuries. You can determine how heavy a weight to use by your ability to lift it eight to 12 times before your muscle becomes fatigued, or you are unable to lift the weight. Many women beginners start with 5-pound dumbbells; men with 10 to 15 pounds, but you may need to start out using as few as 1 or 2 pounds.
  • When doing a strength exercise, do eight to 15 repetitions in a row. Wait a minute, then do another set of eight to 15 repetitions in a row of the same exercise.
  • Gradually add a challenging amount of weight in order to benefit from strength exercises. If you don’t challenge your muscles, you won’t benefit from strength exercises.
  • If you have had joint repair or replacement surgery, check with your surgeon before doing lower-body exercises.
  • Avoid jerking or thrusting weights into position. That can cause injuries. Use smooth, steady movements.
  • Avoid "locking" the joints in your arms and legs in a tightly straightened position.
  • Breathe out as you lift or push, and breathe in as you relax. For example, if you are doing leg lifts, breathe out as you lift your leg, and breathe in as you lower it. This may not feel natural at first, and you probably will have to think about it as you are doing it for awhile.
  • Muscle soreness lasting up to a few days and slight fatigue are normal after muscle-building exercises, but exhaustion, sore joints, and unpleasant muscle pulling aren't. The latter symptoms mean you are overdoing it.
  • None of the exercises you do should cause pain. The range within which you move your arms and legs should never hurt. 
The following exercises are a 30-minute home weight-training workout. Do two sets of eight repetitions of each exercise before repeating on the other side, where applicable.
Immediately stop any exercise with the dumbbells that causes you pain, especially in the shoulder or back. Check with your health care provider if this happens.

Dumbbell chest press

Lie on an exercise ball, with dumbbells resting on each thigh. Lift dumbbells to your shoulders with your palms facing forward. With your elbows to the sides, press dumbbells up until your arms are fully extended. Lower dumbbells and repeat.

Dumbbell rows

Lying face down on the ball, with dumbbell in hand, straighten your arm. Then pull the dumbbell toward your upper chest, with your elbow leading.

Dumbbell squats

Place the ball between the wall and the lower part of your back. In each hand, hold a dumbbell with your arms by your sides. Feet shoulder-width apart, slowly squat like you're about to sit in a chair, allowing your back to follow the roll of the ball. Stop when your thighs become parallel to the floor. Then push up to return to a standing position.

Hip lifts

Lie on the floor face up; place your calves on the ball, about 8 inches apart. Keep your arms on the floor, away from your body. Tilting your pelvis forward, raise your hips as high as possible and contract your buttocks when you reach the top. Lower your buttocks and relax.

Dumbbell shoulder/overhead press

Sit on the ball, or stand with your feet shoulder-width apart and dumbbells at shoulder height. Grasp dumbbells with your palms facing forward. Slowly push them toward the ceiling, stopping before your elbows lock. Then slowly lower them to shoulder height.

Dumbbell arm curls

Stand with your back straight, dumbbells hanging by your sides. With your palms facing upward, curl both dumbbells simultaneously toward your shoulders. Then slowly lower the weight, rotating your palms so they're facing each other at the bottom of the exercise.

Progressing

  • Gradually increasing the amount of weight you use is crucial for building strength.
  • When you are able to lift a weight between eight to 15 times, you can increase the amount of weight you use at your next session.
  • Here is an example of how to progress gradually: Start out with a weight that you can lift only 8 times. Keep using that weight until you become strong enough to lift it 12 to 15 times. Add more weight so that, again, you can lift it only 8 times. Use this weight until you can lift it 12 to 15 times, then add more weight. Keep repeating.