Wednesday, December 27, 2017

How To Get Your Body Ready For Sleep With Yoga

Yoga for better sleep | Mindful Healing | Mississauga Naturopathic Doctor

In our last article, we talked about some of the most common problems associated with insomnia from the perspective of a naturopathic doctor.

One of the tips was to begin a bedtime ritual to help your body unwind and prepare for sleep.

So today, I wanted to share with you a video to help you do just that.

It’s a yoga video by Yoga with Adrienne, who has a number of yoga videos on YouTube for all sorts of things.

If you like the video in this article, check out the rest of her channel.

But first, let’s talk a bit about yoga.

Benefits of Yoga

Much like naturopathic medicine, yoga’s techniques help promote the body’s innate ability to heal itself.

Like all physical activity, it can help with muscle strength, cardiovascular health, weight loss, and overall flexibility.

But one of the greatest benefits of yoga is its ability to help you manage the day-to-day stress of life.

By incorporating meditation and breathing exercises, it can help take your body out of its mode of heightened stress and awareness (the “fight or flight” response), and return to a state of peaceful relaxation.

How yoga improves sleep | Mindful Healing | Mississauga Naturopathic Doctor

Dangers of Yoga

Overall, yoga is considered safe.

However, it’s important to be aware of your own limitations.

If you have recently suffered an injury, or if you have a chronic injury to a certain area of your body, be careful not to push that area too hard.

Likewise, if you haven’t been terribly active lately, you may be at an increased risk of pulling a muscle or otherwise straining yourself.

Yoga isn’t supposed to hurt! If it is, you’re doing something wrong.

While the practice in the video you see below is extremely mellow, any physical activity comes with its own risks.

So be smart and be careful.

Without further ado, the video:

Contact The Mindful Healing Clinic

If you’re interested in living a healthier, happier, more optimal life, we can help.

Here at the Mindful Healing Clinic, we offer a FREE health and wellness session to first-time visitors.

During that session, you’ll get a chance to ask Dr. Maria questions about naturopathic medicine.

From there, Dr. Maria will listen to your concerns, and help you understand what you can do to begin improving your health.

To claim your FREE health and wellness session, contact the Mindful Healing Clinic today.



Until next time,

Dr. Maria Cavallazzi is a medical doctor from Colombia where she practiced as a family physician for 8 years until she moved to Canada 16 years ago.


To find more tips about health, wellness, and alternative medicine, please visit us here: Mindful Healing Naturopathic


Thursday, December 21, 2017

How To Combat Insomnia, Naturally

How to fix insomnia | Mindful Healing | Mississauga Naturopathic Doctor

When it comes to maintaining your health, the habits you form around sleep can be just as important as your diet or your exercise, but it’s often the most overlooked of these three.

As a Streetsville naturopathic doctor, I face questions about this in my practice often.

It’s also a big problem.

According to research from the Canadian Sleep Society, about 20% of patients seeing primary care professionals complain about significant sleep issues.

But while some sleep issues are associated with deeper problems, the truth is that with a small change in our habits, many of us can enjoy a more restful sleep.

Here are some simple changes you can make in your life.

1. Sleep In Complete Darkness

A little night light in the corner may be comforting, but it’s preventing you from getting a good night’s sleep.

One of the functions of melatonin in your body is to regulate your circadian rhythms, and research has shown that exposure to light suppresses your body’s production of melatonin, which can interrupt your sleeping patterns.

Preliminary research from Harvard is exploring the link between low melatonin and cancer, and there is also experimental evidence linking it with obesity, diabetes, depression, and cardiovascular problems.

By investing in a set of black-out blinds for your windows and eliminating all sources of light, you may improve your sleep and reduce your risk of these disorders.

2. Keep A Consistent Sleep Schedule

Sometimes we think we can make up for a wild night by going to bed early the next night, but it’s not that simple.

Your body’s internal clock relies heavily on consistency to properly heal itself, so when you stay up late you’re disrupting that consistency, which can cause insomnia.

I know it’s hard sometimes if you have an event to go to, but going to bed and getting up around the same time can make a big difference in your quality of sleep.

Keeping a consistent sleep schedule allows your brain to more easily regulate when to release the hormones needed for sleep, and when not to.

3. Prepare For Sleep

Do you lie in bed browsing Facebook on your iPad or smart phone just before bed? If so, you’re doing your sleep a massive disservice.

Your brain needs to ease into things. Expecting it to go from active to sleep instantly is unreasonable.

Your body needs time to produce the hormones needed to send signals to the part of your brain in charge of regulating sleep, and it can’t do that when your brain is active.

If you find yourself lying in bed for what feels like hours before you can fall asleep, here’s a simple solution: turn off all your electronic devices about an hour before bed, and do something restful during that time.

Dim the lights, take a bath, read a book, do some yoga or meditation, or whatever else you like to do that’s relaxing.

Get rid of any distractions – both mental and physical – and you’ll have a much better sleep.

LED Screens cause insomnia | Mindful Healing | Mississauga Naturopathic Doctor

4. Avoid Bedtime Snacks

A bedtime snack is nice sometimes, but believe it or not, it can hinder the success of your sleep.

Eating a snack before bed, especially grains or refined sugars, will raise your blood sugar and send your hormone-producing organs into overdrive, which can not only make it more difficult to fall asleep, it will cause you to wake up at odd times.

Ideally, avoid eating before bed altogether. If you do need to, though, make it a snack high in protein.

This won’t increase your blood sugar, and the L-tryptophan in some proteins may help your body produce melatonin.

5. Check Your Vitamin Levels

Vitamin B12 deficiency has been linked with insomnia. It’s connected with your body’s production of melatonin, which we’ve already mentioned is an important hormone to help you sleep.

Higher levels of vitamin B12 in your system have been associated with increased production of melatonin.

According to a 2008 study in the journal Sleep Med, research is still being done on the link between vitamin deficiencies and insomnia, but they have found B12 linked to several factors involved in insomnia, including regulation of your circadian rhythm.

Calcium and magnesium deficiencies have also been linked with insomnia. Calcium levels are heightened during the REM phase of sleep, and an inability to achieve REM sleep has been associated with a deficiency in calcium.

Since REM is the deepest phase of sleep, you can see why this is a problem.

And as for magnesium, deficiency is associated with frequent interruptions in sleep, while a diet high in magnesium has been shown to eliminate these.

Contact The Mindful Healing Clinic

If you’re having difficulty sleeping, there are a large number of possible causes.

Contact the Mindful Healing Clinic to book your FREE health and wellness session.

During that session, you’ll get a chance to ask any questions you may have about naturopathic medicine, and Dr. Maria will help you understand your treatment options.

Contact the Mindful Healing Clinic to book your FREE health and wellness session today.



Until next time,

Dr. Maria Cavallazzi is a medical doctor from Colombia where she practiced as a family physician for 8 years until she moved to Canada 16 years ago.


To read more ways on health, wellness, and alternative medicine, please visit us here: local naturopath


Wednesday, December 6, 2017

Leaky Gut Syndrome: What It Is And How To Avoid It

Avoiding Leaky Gut Syndrome | Mindful Healing | Mississauga Naturopathic Doctor

Last time, we talked about the health of your gut from a naturopathic doctor in Mississauga’s perspective, and how important it is in maintaining overall health.

Today, I wanted to talk to you about a specific gut issue – leaky gut syndrome.

What is leaky gut syndrome? What does it do? And more importantly, how do you avoid it?

Keep reading to find out.

“More bacteria live and work in one linear centimeter of your lower colon than all the humans who have ever lived.

That’s what’s going on in your digestive tract right now. Are we in charge, or are we simply hosts for bacteria?

It all depends on your outlook.” – Neil deGrasse Tyson

What Is Leaky Gut Syndrome?

Your digestive system is an incredibly large organ.

If you unravelled it and laid it all out, you could cover 250 square metres with it.

The vast majority of this would be your intestines – a long tube through which digested food is passed, nutrients are withdrawn, and waste is disposed of.

Your digestive system is also full of friendly bacteria which help maintain all sorts of bodily functions, including your immune system and your brain.

The contents of your digestive system are supposed to stay inside your digestive system – this is where they’re most beneficial to your body.

But when you have a leaky gut, the barrier of your intestines becomes permeated, allowing things to slip through the cracks and into your body, where they are definitely not beneficial.

Conditions Associated With Leaky Gut Syndrome

As things like toxins, antigens, healthy bacteria (at least healthy when it’s in your gut), and other microscopic organisms and particles pass through the gaps in your intestines, they can trigger an autoimmune inflammatory reaction within your body.

This can trigger a range of different health issues, including:

• Celiac disease
• Allergies and sensitivities to food
• Type 1 diabetes
• Autism
• IBS
• Rheumatoid arthritis
• Asthma
• Parkinson’s

These are serious issues, of course. So how can you avoid leaky gut syndrome?

To do that, it helps to know what causes it. Here are three of the primary causes of leaky gut syndrome.

1. Stress

When you experience high levels of stress, a number of different things happen in your body.

You’ll experience an increase in cortisol and adrenalin, which slows down your rate of digestion, speeds your heart rate, and restricts blood flow to your brain and your gut in favour of your muscles.

The end result is a burst of energy that was designed to help our prehistoric ancestors escape from a sabre tooth tiger or some other scary thing.

We commonly refer to this as the “fight or flight” response.

Once our prehistoric ancestors escaped from the threat, their hormone levels and blood flow returned to normal and they moved on with their day.

But these days, your fight or flight response is more likely to be triggered during a situation where you need to neither fight nor flee.

As a result, your body stays in fight or flight mode longer, which means the blood flow to your gut is restricted longer, which can lead to intestinal permeability.

In other words, leaky gut.

That blood flow is essential for the friendly bacteria in your gut to thrive.

But one of the important roles of these bacteria is to signal your brain with the response it needs to cope with your elevated level of stress.

So the more stress your body experiences, the less capable it becomes to actually cope with that stress.

Yikes.

Healthy Diet For Leaky Gut Syndrome || Mindful Healing | Mississauga Naturopathic Doctor

2. Diet

As with just about everything health-related, dietary factors play a huge role in causing leaky gut syndrome.

But there are a few key offenders that we find in a lot of leaky gut cases.

First, alcohol.

A 2008 study published in Alcohol shows that during the process of digesting and metabolizing alcohol, the chemical acetaldehyde is created, which can lead to leaky gut.

Sugar, similarly, can cause inflammation in your gut which leads to a hostile environment for the friendly bacteria there, and can lead to a leaky gut.

Some of the other common culprits include:

• Dairy
• Gluten, particularly those who suffer from celiac
• Emulsifiers, solvents, and other artificial additives
• Glucose-heavy foods

Beginning an elimination diet can help you pinpoint what it is that may be causing leaky gut.

3. Pharmaceutical Medications

There is a specific type of pharmaceutical known as NSAIDs – Non-Steroidal Anti Inflammatory Drugs.

You may not have heard that name before, but you certainly know these drugs by their more common names – ibuprofen, acetaminophen, and naproxen will be three familiar examples.

These drugs are common in just about everyone’s medicine cabinet, and for good reason.

They’re relatively low risk and can help us deal with pain.

Occasional use is nothing to be concerned about.

However, long-term use has been shown to cause inflammation in the intestinal tract, as well as increase permeability, according to a 1998 study in the scholarly journal Gut.

It’s best to avoid taking these unless necessary.

Solutions For Leaky Gut Syndrome

If you believe you may be dealing with leaky gut syndrome, there’s a lot we can do to help.

Contact the Mindful Healing Clinic to book your FREE health and wellness session with Dr. Maria today.

You’ll get a chance to ask any questions you may have, Dr. Maria will address your concerns, and from there you’ll walk away with a better understanding of what you can do to address your health issues.

Contact the Mindful Healing Clinic to book your FREE health and wellness session today.



Until next time,

Dr. Maria Cavallazzi is a medical doctor from Colombia where she practiced as a family physician for 8 years until she moved to Canada 16 years ago.


To get additional information about health, wellness, and alternative medicine, please visit us here: Mindful Healing Naturopathic