Friday, August 29, 2008

Family Doc: Family Doc: TLC - Sleep

Family Doc: Family Doc: TLC - Sleep

Family Doc: TLC - Sleep

Family Doc: TLC - Sleep
http://www.blogcatalog.com/directory/health/general-health

TLC - Sleep

Okay, sleep is not an "official" part of therapeutic lifestyle change, but I consider it the foundation of your ability to carry out the other components. It is nearly impossible to gather the motivation to exercise if you are exhausted getting out of bed in the morning. Reaching for sugary or caffeinated beverages is natural if your energy is lagging. And, carrying a sleep deficit sets you up to be stressed out - therefore making it more difficult to make positive changes like quitting smoking.

Research indicates that it is ideal to get between 7 and 9 hours of sleep, so the old adage to get 8 hours per night has some data to back it up. Both too little and too much sleep are associated with not only feeling poorly but a higher risk for death and disease.

Getting 8 hours of sleep each night is challenging for a lot of reasons:
1. You don't have 8 hours to spare.
2. You enjoy staying up late to spend time with your spouse, watch TV, or have some quiet time after the kids are in bed.
3. You have to wake up so early that you'd be in bed before the sun goes down if you got 8 hours of sleep.

Whatever the reason, rearranging your life, habits, and schedule around a reasonable sleep schedule is worth it!

A lot of my patients have problems with sleep. Most commonly this involves either difficulty falling asleep or waking up throughout the night. Sleep hygiene is what I most often recommend.
Sleep hygiene is just like personal hygiene - a series of behaviors or habits that help keep you healthy (and clean). Some general guidelines include:

1. Remove the TV from your bedroom. This is the hardest one for most people. Having a TV in your room makes it difficult to fall asleep and stay asleep. Your bedroom should be a quiet haven that promotes sleep - and TV does not fit into that.

2. Remove the TV from your bedroom. I'm serious about this. It is really important.

3. Make your room comfortable - good mattress, right temperature, quiet, and dark.

4. Try to keep on a regular schedule. Go to be at the same time and get up at the same time (even on the weekends). This helps tune your body into when it should be sleepy and when it should be awake.

5. Just like kids, adults need a calming bedtime routine. Sitting up in bed watching Law & Order with a bag of chips and a Diet Coke does not promote good sleep. Choose relaxing activities in the hour before bed - reading or doing a crossword puzzle under low light, taking a bath, talking with your spouse, meditating, etc.

6. If you can't fall asleep after 15 minutes, get out of bed and do a quiet (not TV) activity until you feel sleepy.

7. Your circadian rhythm is light dependent. You tend to wake up when exposed to bright light. This can happen at 11 pm or 6 am. TV and computer monitors emit a bright light that tells your body it is time to wake up. Avoid bright lights before bed and use bright light in the morning to help wake up.

8. Find a way to deal with persistent worry or anxiety that might interfere with your sleep. This could include meditation, journaling, prayer, etc.

9. Avoid naps if you have problems sleeping at night. Naps can be good but are not a substitute for a sustained night sleep.

10. Avoid caffeine before bed (probably anytime after dinner). Do not use alcohol to help you fall asleep.

Good night!

Tuesday, August 19, 2008

Health Information on the Web

A quick detour from TLC (Therapeutic Lifestyle Change)...

I've recently discovered a new google offering - the google knol (knol.google.com) - these are shared bits of wisdom on a variety of topics (including how to drive a long-distance truck). But, there are a number of high quality health topics written by physicians from around the country. Not every topic is mentioned, but it is a worthwhile site to check out.

Other great sites include:

mayo.com (general health info written at a 6th grade (I believe) level

http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/tutorial.html (wonderful site with video of different health topics and procedures)

www.familydoctor.org

I strongly recommend that my patients investigate health concerns and treatments on reputable web sites for a number of reasons:
1. It will reinforce what you learned at the doctor's office
2. It often has written information, pictures and sometimes even videos
3. You may find out new information that even your doctor doesn't know (yet)
4. It will often give a more comprehensive view of the topic than can be covered in a normal doctor's visit

Happy surfing...

Wednesday, August 6, 2008

TLC - DIET

As I mentioned in my last post, TLC stands for therapeutic lifestyle change - things that you can change in your diet, exercise, emotional health, weight, and behaviors like smoking or drinking that are therapeutic (make you more healthy). If you asked a hundred different doctors what they thought was the most important change, you'd likely get a dozen different answers. However, since this is my blog, I get to decide! Actually, despite today's subject, I think the most important thing is to stop smoking. We'll talk about that a different time.

Today, I wanted to talk about diet - what you eat. We had an endocrinologist (a doctor who specializes in things like diabetes) come and talk to our medical practice yesterday. She spent over an hour talking about diabetes without mentioning any medication treatment. Just goes to show you that non-medicine treatments often are the most important part of any treatment plan. She had a great slide that looked something like this:

Treatment of Diabetes

1. Diet
2. Diet
3. Diet
4. Diet
5. Diet
6. Diet
7. Diet
8. Diet
9. Diet and exercise
10.
medication


If you are having a difficult time reading that last line, it says "medications". So, whether you have diabetes or not, whether you are overweight or not, diet matters a great deal. If you go to the bookstore, you will see dozens of books on "diet". Many of them have a gimmick: "Eat only fat and protein", "Don't eat any sugar", "Only eat foods that begin with the first letter of your name".

These diets actually do work. Not because the authors have found the magic bullet to achieve weight loss, but because calorie restriction - any type of calorie restriction - will equal weight loss. That's just basic thermodynamics.

However, you don't need to spend any time or money researching the best fad diet. Just eat a healthy diet and practice moderation. What's part of a healthy diet? One great place to get a lot of information is: www.mypyramid.gov

Basic information includes:

1. Brown is good. Brown bread, brown rice, brown pasta. All the "brown" stuff is made from whole wheat or complex carbohydrates. Carbohydrates are just another name for sugar. Simple carbohydrates (like white bread, white rice, or a Twinkie) turn into sugar very quickly in your digestive system. This has a lot of different effects, but to keep it simple, simple carbohydrates can cause weight gain, a burst of energy followed by feeling really fatigued, insulin resistance and even diabetes. Complex carbohydrates break down into sugar more slowly. This is better for your body, a more natural way for your body to absorb sugar, and not associated with the quick up and down sugar levels that you see with simple carbohydrates.

2. Fruits and veggies rock. Do you ever see nutritional supplements or vitamins proclaiming their "anti-oxidant" benefits? Anti-oxidants abound in fruits and vegetables and, while we don't understand exactly how they benefit your health, they help repair damage inside your cells. Over time, this may reduce your risk for heart disease or cancer. Eat as many fruits and vegetables as you can. Every January, I try to eat 8 fruits and vegetables a day. It is hard and I don't have much room left for anything else. So, if you are not a huge fruit and veggie person, just try to gradually increase to a goal of about 5 servings per day.


3. Eat things in their most natural form. This just means to choose an orange instead of orange juice, a baked potato you cook at home rather than one that comes from the frozen food section, or "real" oatmeal instead of an over-flavored packet of instant oatmeal. Now, we all eat "processed" foods because we are no longer part of a society in which people raise their own chickens, grow their own corn, or bake their own bread (unless you are Amish, but then you probably wouldn't be reading a blog). So, just get closer to the food's natural state as much as possible.

4. Do not make anything forbidden. This is likely one of the biggest culprits in diet failure. You ate the forbidden piece of cheesecake, so the whole diet is ruined. Or, you just absolutely must have chocolate and that is not allowed on your "diet". Anything is okay in moderation. "Moderation" means different things for different people. Basically, you can eat whatever you want as long as it does not become a significant source of your daily calories (meaning you only ate 1000 calories today but all of them came from a lemon meringue pie), it is an occasional treat, and you eat a serving at a time (rather than half a cake, a box of twinkies, etc.).

5. No diet sodas. I know this is a touchy subject. And, I have to admit that this is not any organization's "official" recommendation. It is just my personal, albeit educated, opinion. The reason for this particular piece of advice is my belief that diet sodas can contribute to obesity. I'm not sure how this happens, but recent research in lab rats indicates a few possible mechanisms. It may be that when you drink a diet soda and your brain expects to get 250 kilocalories of energy but doesn't, that your ability to accurately detect the caloric content of food is altered. This might make you more prone to overeat. Or it may be that your body thinks it is getting 250 kilocalories of energy, but doesn't and tries to "make up for it" by giving you a craving for more calories in some other way. It also seems that your body processes drinks differently from foods. Whatever the reason, I strongly recommend eliminating diet sodas. This does not mean to substitute with regular sodas (especially if you are diabetic). Instead, choose non-sugary drink options - water, iced tea or coffee.

I hope this is a helpful overview of dietary lifestyle changes.

Monday, August 4, 2008

Therapeutic Lifestyle Change

I was all excited about my new invention - I was going to start the field of lifestyle medicine. This would be a specialty focus in diet, exercise, nutrition, stress reduction, etc. However, like many new inventors, I discovered that my invention was....already invented. Yes, lifestyle medicine is already a field of medical specialty. Yet, as a family physician, I still have rich opportunities to practice lifestyle medicine with my patients.

Often, as part of the documented treatment plan, I've noted - TLC discussed/advised. What does that mean? Well, it is my shorthand for Therapeutic Lifestyle Changes were discussed and advised for the patient.

TLC is just that - Tender Loving Care for your body. Eating the right foods, weighing a healthy amount, getting physical activity, avoiding stress, getting adequate rest, not smoking, not drinking a lot of alcohol or caffeine - all of these are great ways to not only feel better but are also important to healing diseases like high blood pressure, heart disease, depression, and diabetes.

Therapeutic Lifestyle Changes are also one of the hardest things to do. It is far easier to pop a pill for your high blood pressure than it is to cut out the salt in your diet, lose 20 lbs and start a walking program. However, guess which option is cheaper, more effective, healthier and has fewer side effects?

More to come on specific elements of TLC...