Thursday, September 24, 2020

Health Healing through proper breathing

Monday, May 15, 2000  
By Carol Krucoff 

THINK you know how to breathe? Try this simple test: Sit or stand wherever you are and take a deep breath. Then let it out. 

 What expanded more as you inhaled, your chest or your belly? If the answer is your chest, you're a "chest breather,'' and like most people you're doing it all wrong. You're also putting your health in jeopardy. 

 The technique is so powerful that Dr James Gordon teaches it to nearly every patient he sees, from people with advanced cancer to those crippled by arthritis to school children struggling with attention deficit disorder. 

 "Slow, deep breathing is probably the single best anti-stress medicine we have,'' says Gordon, a clinical professor of psychiatry at the Georgetown University School of Medicine and director of the Center for Mind-Body Medicine in the District of Columbia, the United States. "When you bring air down into the lower portion of the lungs, where oxygen exchange is most efficient, everything changes. Heart rate slows, blood pressure decreases, muscles relax, anxiety eases and the mind calms. Breathing this way also gives people a sense of control over their body and their emotions that is extremely therapeutic.'' 

Obviously, everyone alive knows how to breathe. But Dr Gordon and other experts in the emerging field of mind-body medicine, say that few people in Western, industrialised society know how to breathe correctly. Taught to suck in our guts and puff out our chests, we're bombarded with a constant barrage of stress, which causes muscles to tense and respiration rate to increase. 

 "Look around your office, and you'll see so little movement in people's bellies that it's a wonder they're actually alive,'' Dr Gordon says. "Then watch a baby breathe and you'll see the belly go up and down, deep and slow.'' 

 With age, most people shift from this healthy abdominal breathing to shallow chest breathing, he says. This strains the lungs, which must move faster to ensure adequate oxygen flow, and taxes the heart, which is forced to speed up to provide enough blood for oxygen transport. The result is a vicious cycle, where stress prompts shallow breathing, which in turn creates more stress. 

 "The simplest and most powerful technique for protecting your health is breathing,'' asserts Andrew Weil, director of the Program in Integrative Medicine and clinical professor of internal medicine at the University of Arizona in Tucson. Weil teaches "breathwork'' to all his patients. "I have seen breath control alone achieve remarkable results: lowering blood pressure, ending heart arrhythmias, improving long-standing patterns of poor digestion, increasing blood circulation throughout the body, decreasing anxiety and allowing people to get off addictive anti-anxiety drugs and improving sleep and energy cycles.'' 

 Unlike any other bodily function, he notes, "breathing is the only one you can do either completely consciously or unconsciously. "It's controlled by two different sets of nerves and muscles, voluntary and involuntary. And it's the only function through which the conscious mind can influence the involuntary, or autonomic, nervous system, which is responsible for revving-up the body to fight or flee. 

 "Western medical education at the moment doesn't include information of this kind,'' says Weil, who teaches breathing and other non-traditional techniques to what he calls "doctors of the future'' through a variety of programmes at his institution. "In the four years I spent at Harvard Medical School and a year of internship in San Francisco, I learned nothing of the healing power of breath. I learned about the anatomy of the respiratory system, and I learned about diseases of the respiratory tract. 

 But I learned nothing about breath as the connection between the conscious and unconscious mind, or as the doorway to control of the autonomic nervous system, or about using breathwork as a technique to control anxiety and regulate mental states, or the possibility that breath represents the movement of spirit in the body and that 'breathwork' can be a primary means of raising spiritual awareness.''

 Eastern healing techniques often prescribe conscious breathing to help restore health to people who are overly stressed. 

 "In Japan, a diagnosis of autonomic nervous system imbalance is common, but in the medicine of the West, we don't have this diagnosis,'' he says. "Western medicine typically tries to blunt the overactivity of the sympathetic nervous system or deal with its consequences at a more superficial level by giving drugs to suppress or control it.'' 

 In contrast, relaxation breathing works to increase parasympathetic tone, slowing down the heart rate and decreasing blood pressure, bringing the two systems into balance. And unlike drugs, he says, "it's free of toxicity, it's free of cost, and it's literally right under our nose.'' 

 Techniques that use focused breathing to affect the nervous system, change physiology and connect the body with the mind can be traced back to ancient India, notes Weil, who learned the breathing techniques he uses through the study of yoga and by working with osteopathic physicians. 

 "In many languages, the word for breath is the word for spirit,'' he notes, citing the Latin spiritus, Hebrew ruach, Greek numa and Indian prana. We lose this linguistic connection in English, he says, except with the words "respiration'' and "conspire.'' 

 Many systems of meditation and numerous spiritual practices also centre on conscious breathing, Weil notes in his recently released CD, Breathing: The Master Key to Self Healing (Sounds True, 1999). "By simply putting your attention on your breath without doing anything to change it,'' he says, "you move in the direction of relaxation.'' Or as yoga master B.K.S. Iyengar explains in his classic guide, Light on Yoga (Schoken Books, 1966): "Regulate the breathing, and thereby control the mind.'' 

 There is little scientific research documenting the healing power of breathing, in part because its practice is so new in Western medicine. And unlike drugs or devices, breathing has no manufacturer who must sponsor studies to support its use. 

 Increased interest in studying the effects of non-traditional healing therapies such as relaxation breathing led to the founding in 1991 of the Office of Alternative Medicine, now the National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine, at the National Institutes of Health. 

 One of the few studies to examine a clinical application of yoga "belly breathing'' found that menopausal women who learned the technique were able to reduce the frequency of hot flashes by about 50%. 

 "The average breathing rate is 15 to 16 cycles (inhaling and exhaling) per minute,'' notes Robert Freedman, a professor of psychiatry and behavioral neurosciences at Wayne State University School of Medicine in Detroit. "But with training, women can slow their breathing down to seven or eight cycles per minute, which can significantly reduce the frequency and intensity of hot flashes.'' 

Mind-body approaches have been reported in scientific studies to be effective in the treatment of a variety of stress-related disorders, says Herbert Benson, an associate professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School and president of the Mind/Body Medical Institute in Boston. As an example, he points to research showing that chronic-pain patients who learned mind-body self-care techniques in a 10-week outpatient program reduced clinic visits by 36% for more than two years after the classes. 

 Deep diaphragmatic breathing and other mind-body techniques can significantly reduce symptoms of severe PMS as well as anxiety, depression and other forms of emotional distress, according to research by Alice Domar, an assistant professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School and director of the Mind/Body Center for Women's Health. 

 In addition, her studies suggest that these practices can combat infertility. After completing a mind-body group program for women with infertility--where 284 participants learned a variety of self-nurturing techniques such as deep breathing--a surprising percentage of women, 44%, conceived within six months. 

 Proper breathing is the first thing Domar teaches virtually all her patients. To teach the technique, Domar has patients make a fist and squeeze it tight. "Then I ask them what happens to their breath, and they realize that they've stopped breathing,'' she says. "When we get anxious, we tend to hold our breath or breathe shallowly.'' 

 Domar then shows patients how to breathe deeply into the abdomen, a process most women tell her runs counter to the "hold in your stomach'' breathing they've done all their adult lives. 

 Domar's favourite stress-reduction technique is a short version of this breath-focus exercise, which she calls a "mini-relaxation,'' or "mini.'' "You can do a mini when you're stuck in traffic, at a boring meeting, whenever you look at a clock or any time you pick up a phone,'' she says. 

 In our stressed-out world, the fight-or-flight response that kept our ancestors alive has turned into a "stew and chew,'' contends Pamela Peeke, an assistant clinical professor of medicine at the University of Maryland, who studied the connection between stress and fat at the National Institutes of Health. If no physical response occurs after stress revs the body up for battle, chronically elevated levels of stress hormones stimulate appetite and encourage fat cells deep inside the abdomen to store what she calls "toxic weight.'' 

 Peeke encourages Eastern movements, such as yoga and tai chi, which rely on taking deep abdominal breaths. But she particularly urges patients to do aerobic activity to help neutralize the effects of stress. 

In hospitals, breathing techniques once were taught only to women for use during childbirth. Today, some hospitals have begun teaching relaxation breathing to patients of all ages and both sexes being treated for a wide range of conditions. At the Washington Hospital Center in the District of Columbia, nurse Julie Oliver incorporates breathwork into support groups she leads, including one for people with congestive heart failure and another for parents of babies in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit. 

 "Babies, especially premature babies, can sense how the mother and father feel,'' Oliver notes. "If the parents go in full of muscle tension and start jiggling the baby, the baby gets too stimulated, and the staff may need to tell the parents to back away, which adds to everyone's stress.'' 

 At Duke University Medical Center in Durham, North Carolina, nurse Jon Seskevich has taught "soft belly breathing'' to most of the more than 15,000 patients he's worked with since he became a full-time stress and pain management educator for the hospital in 1990. About half the patients he sees have cancer, and the others have a wide variety of ailments including heart disease, cystic fibrosis and lung disorders. 

 One of his most dramatic cases involved a lung-cancer patient. 

 "I walked into the room to find this very large man literally fighting for breath,'' Seskevich recalls. "His pulse oxygen was 74, and you want it to be 90 or above. I sat down next to him and started talking in a calm voice. I asked him if it was okay if I touched his belly. He nodded, so I put my hand on his belly and told him to breathe into my hand, to let his belly be soft and to let his abdomen rise into my hand.'' 

After about six minutes of this, the man's pulse oxygen was 94 and he was breathing comfortably. "I didn't tell him to relax,'' Seskevich notes. "All day people were telling him to relax, and it seemed to make his struggle worse. I just told him to breathe softly into his belly. We didn't cure his cancer, but we may have saved him a trip to the intensive-care unit.'' 

 Patients are hungry for self-care information, says Seskevich. 

 "People are very anxious to learn what they can do for themselves,'' he says. "They become empowered by these techniques and they do better.'' 

 "There are a lot of health professionals today who aren't satisfied with the tools they have, and to some extent feel lost,'' says Gordon of Washington's Center for Mind-Body Medicine. "They are looking for ways they feel they can help people again, that will put meaning back into their practice.'' 

 Weil's Integrative Medicine programme recently graduated its first class of physicians, is starting an Internet-based associate fellowship program, and is launching a continuing-education program for psychiatrists, oncologists and cardiologists all of which will include a unit on breathing and breathwork. Harvard's Mind/Body Medical Institute has 14 affiliate programmes at hospitals around the country and is negotiating with at least one other. 

 As graduates of these and similar programs bring mind-body strategies to their practices, teaching breathwork and other forms of self-care will soon become a common part of American medical care, these experts predict.

 "Sometimes I suggest my patients make signs to post in their office, at their computers, or in their bedrooms,'' Gordon writes in his Manifesto for a New Medicine (Addison-Wesley, 1996). "Signs that simply say, 'Breathe!' ''--LAT-WP 


 Carol Krucoff is co-author, with her husband, Dr Mitchell Krucoff, of "Healing Moves: How to Cure, Relieve, and Prevent Common Ailments With Exercise'' (Harmony Books, 2000).


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