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Tag: Rocky Mountain MS Center

Multiple Sclerosis and Nutrition in MORE

I was recently interviewed in MORE: For Women of Style and Substance magazine about MS and nutrition. While I tend to focus on removing inflammatory agents from the MS patient’s diet to reduce inflammation and MS symptoms, Thomas Stewart of the Rocky Mountain MS Center also offers good reminders about the roles of vitamin D and omega-3 fatty acids in MS.

Tom and I have done a couple of tv spots together in the past in support of the Rocky Mountain MS Center. He knows a lot about using complementary alternative medicine (CAM) together with western medicine when it comes to MS.

Adapt Yoga Poses for MS or Other Physical Issues

Use it or Lose It. That is one of my mottos.

Whether you have multiple sclerosis like I do or are just aging like any other human being on the planet, you will help your body and brain remain active and functional longer if you keep them moving than if you let it stagnate and rust (for lack of a better word).

Dr. Tim Vollmer at the Rocky Mountain MS Center recently told me that studies have shown that exercise, particularly when it’s combined with mental alertness, helps the brain stave off the degeneration we expect with aging, Altzheimers, MS, etc.

Looks like my Jazzercise addiction that forces me to coordinate many parts of my body at once is doing for my brain what the workout is doing for my body.

Yoga is another workout that carries these benefits, and can be more accessible to those of us with MS who may have lost some abilities.

My MS Yoga allows you to adapt and modify the poses based on your individual needs each day. When developing the My MS Yoga program, Baron Baptiste and Dr. Frohman selected poses that address many of the issues common to multiple sclerosis patients.

I love how My MS Yoga offers three different practices and options to modify each pose depending on how you are feeling each day. These are great for anyone looking to modify yoga poses to work with their abilities or lack thereof.

When I first started practicing yoga, shortly after I was diagnosed wtih MS in 1999, I found a yoga instructor who specifically worked with debilitated patients through the Colorado National MS Society chapter (they have lots of great resources like this!). I ended up following her to her studio and practicing with her for years until she moved away.

I love yoga as a health modality because it is such an effective stress reliever physically and mentally. With regular practice, it truly brings about a sense of wellbeing.

When my kids have trouble winding down at night, doing a few yoga poses together will help them to release the tension and sink into bed. It works for me, too!

Physical Activity a Key to Later Health

Those who are physically active in their 50s and 60s are more likely to avoid chronic diseases and premature death, according to a study out of the Harvard School of Public Health.

The Nurses Health Study
The Nurses Health Study

Analyzing data from 13,535 female participants in the Nurses’ Health Study, researchers correlated reports of physical activity at the average age of 60 years with successful survival into the 70s. Successful survival was defined as “no history of ten major chronic diseases, or coronary artery bypass graft surgery and no cognitive impairment physical impairment, or mental health limitations.”

The correlation was considered strong enough to provide “evidence that higher levels of midlife physical activity are associated with exceptional health status among women who survive to older ages and corroborate the potential role of physical activity in improving overall health.”

Incorporate mental activity to your workout, adds neurologist Tim Vollmer, Co-Director of the Rocky Mountain MS Center Clinic, and keep your brain healthy along with your body.

Although repetitive actions like running are great for your cardiovascular system, coordinated arm leg movements like you find in yoga, pilates, dance, tennis, or my favorite, Jazzercise, can help keep all synapses firing.

Of course, you don’t need to wait until you hit midlife to get the benefits from regular physical and mental activity. The research shows that the old motto “Use it, or lose it!” has been proven to be true.