Sleep alert! Blue light has a dark side – Harvard Health Publications

I woke up an hour early today because I felt well rested. This never happens. I usually need about 10.5 hours a night (a sleep study I did showed I woke up 14 times an hour, which is probably why). I take supplements and Silenor (doxepin) to get that sleep. I also have trouble getting to bed before midnight, because I have elevated night time cortisol. What was different about last night?
I turned off the TV at 9. After reading about the harmful effects of screen time on your sleep, I thought I would give it a try. I also downloaded a blue light filter on my phone and tablet to avoid exposure.
Give it a try!

http://www.health.harvard.edu/newsletters/harvard_health_letter/2012/may/blue-light-has-a-dark-side/

Online Mindfulness Based Stress Reduction Course (free!)

Based on the clinically proven mindfulness meditation course developed by Jon Kabat Zinn – helps to reduce chronic pain and stress. I took this course in person at my pain clinic for a small fee and it was incredibly helpful to me. This one is conveniently online and free 🙂

http://palousemindfulness.com/selfguidedMBSR.html

Brain Abnormalities Discovered in Patients with Chronic Fatigue Syndrome

painfighter's avatarFighting Fibromyalgia

cfs brain The red, blue, and green spheres correspond to size and locations of increased cortical thickness in the right occipital, precentral, and middle temporal regions, respectively. The green arrows also point to the middle temporal region of increased thickness. Credit: Radiological Society of North America

 

A new study by Michael Zeineh of the Stanford University School of Medicine now proves that chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) is not hypochondria or our imagination, it is a real disease. Zeineh and his team discovered brain abnormalities in CFS patients that will hopefully help doctors to better treat this debilitating disease. There is a lot of cross over between CFS and fibromyalgia, as anyone who suffers from one or both of these devastating diseases will tell you. Patients with one of these diseases (or both) battle chronic disease, chronic pain, micro-inflammation, environmental sensitivities (such as light, smells, foods, weather, etc.) and much more every…

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Organically grown foods may offer greater health and safety than foods conventionally grown – Medical News Today

Cadmium, a heavy metal found in fertilizer, makes conventionally grown food a danger to your health (chemical fertilizer is not used in growing organic food). Organic food also has higher levels of antioxidant phytochemicals.
http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/283167.php?tw

Part 2 of How to outsmart your foggy brain

Supplements for Adrenal Fatigue

So last week I wrote about my recent energy crash and brain fog (which seems to go along with digestive symptoms). I think it has to do with starting school courses again (two online classes). At any rate, the things I tried last week improved my coping, but not enough to ward off the zombie fatigue permanently. So I decided to add some more supplements to the mix. I rechecked my CFS bible ‘From fatigued to fantastic’ by Dr. Teitelbaum and realized I’ve been overlooking adrenal fatigue. He recommends Vit C (500-1000mg), Vit  B5, also known as pantothenic acid (100-150 mg) and licorice (200-400 mg).
I got all three (but my pantothenic acid supplement was 250 mg). I didn’t sleep well but my energy was much better sustained during the day! The downside was the side effects (diarrhea), probably from taking more than Teitelbaum recommended… And my sensitive tummy! Obviously I need to take less and even try to work up to the recommended dosage. Hope that gives someone out there more tools to add to their arsenal!

Update: after two weeks my energy has been much better, so my adrenals must have been zapped!

There’s formaldehyde in my conditioner.

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A pound of prevention is worth an ounce of cure, right? When it comes to my health, I try to proactively live a healthy lifestyle and avoid anything risky. That’s just common sense. These days, many people, especially those of us living with chronic illness, devote a lot of time and energy to our health and wellbeing.

When it came to personal care products, I usually bought them in the drugstore. I used to think that government safety regulation prevented anything too harmful from being used in these products. That was before I began reading ‘There’s Lead in your Lipstick’ by Gillian Deacon. I recently developed several skin conditions, like scalp dermatitis and millia, which made me want to look for some alternatives. Then I learned that there was (is) formaldehyde in my conditioner (DMDM hydantoin). My jaw dropped open for a good 30 seconds. How is this possible?

Apparently there is virtually no industry regulation on what ingredients companies can put in their products.* Known toxic contaminants and carcinogens, like phthalates, 1, 4-dioxane and lead, are present in common cosmetics. According to Deacon, there are more than 85 000 ingredients used in the personal care industry. Of these, fewer than 15% have been studied for their human health impact. Worse, the interactions between multiple chemical ingredients haven’t been studied at all. Most disturbingly, the accumulation of chemicals in the body, and the long term health consequences, are unknown. But facts like the presence of parabens, a common cosmetic additive, in 19 out of 20 breast tumors suggest a startling relationship.**Other research demonstrates links between ingredients or contaminants and sperm damage, low birth weight in girls, and abnormal reproductive organ development in male infants.*

Gillian Deacon recommends looking up your personal care products on the Environmental Working Group’s Skin Deep database, a comprehensive metric of the chemical hazards in thousands of common personal care products. Drawing on multiple government, industrial and academic research databases, Skin Deep puts products on a scale of 1-10 in terms of chemical hazards, based on the ingredients.

Here are 3 of my products:

Selsun Blue Dandruff Shampoo, Medicated Treatment
Overall Score: 7 (high concern)
Particularly for cancer, allergies and immunotoxicity
Harmful ingredients: Selenium sulfide (8), Cocamide DEA (7), Fragrance (8), DMDM hydantoin – formaldehyde releaser (7).

Tresemme conditioner – smooth and silky
Overall score: 5 (moderate)
Particularly: allergies and immunotoxicity, endocrine disruption
Harmful ingredients: fragrance (8), Lilial (7), Geraniol (7), DMDM hydantoin – formaldehyde releaser (7)

Covergirl clean foundation for sensitive skin
Overall 5- moderate
Allergies and immunotoxins, reproductive toxicity, endocrine disruption
Harmful: Propylparaben (10)(!) methyl-paraben (4), PEG (3)

I don’t think I can continue to douse myself in toxic chemicals! I’ll be looking up alternative products in my health food store on Skin Deep to make sure they aren’t toxic. (Be careful of greenwashing – ‘organic’ or ‘natural’ products may be misleading). Always check the label. Apparently my skin conditions may be a reaction to these products. Furthermore, my immune compromised fibromyalgia body doesn’t need any more challenges!

*Skin Deep
**http://www.gilldeacon.ca/projects-lipstick.php