Nervous System Overview

goof_buttoncomThe nervous system is the body’s communication system, the superhighway of a vast network of nerves that connect in a series of electro-chemical reactions, often referred to as “impulses.” The nervous system allows the myriad biological functions of the body to work together smoothly. Without the nervous system, we would not be able to move, think, smell, see, hear, feel, or taste. We would be no different then a tree.

The nervous system has far-reaching effects, connecting systems and maintaining specific physiologic functions through its gathering and sending of data. From the subtle signaling of the endocrine system’s hormones, to the inflammatory and immune response systems, to moving your arm, to taking in a sensory experience and deciphering it, to digesting a meal- these actions are all possible because the nervous system is intact.

As you might expect, the nervous system is complex, so it has been broken into sub-sections in order to understand its interconnected workings. To begin, there are two anatomical sections: the central nervous system (CNS) and the peripheral nervous system (PNS).

The CNS is the processing center, located in the brain and the spinal cord, where information from all areas of the body and the external environment is received, interpreted, and responded to, sending out signals where needed.

The PNS is made up of nerves that connect the CNS to receptors, muscles, and glands. The PNS is basically the hard wiring that connects every muscle, organ, and gland to the CNS. Just like your electrical appliances need to be connected to its power source with wires, the PNS needs nerves to conduct the impulses from brain to its target cells.

CNS, PNS, and further divisions of the PNS:
1. Central nervous system (CNS) → The brain and the spinal cord
The brain is a complex organ, containing billions of neurons and is the main control center for the entire body
The spinal cord, protected by the vertebral column, is a relay center for sensory and motor impulses to and from all areas of the body

2. Peripheral nervous system (PNS) → 12 cranial nerves and 31 pairs of spinal nerves
Physiologically the PNS is divided into afferent (sensory) and efferent (motor, away from the brain) systems. The afferent nerves send signals from sensory receptors to the CNS and the efferent nerves sends signals from the CNS to the muscles and glands.

220px-descartes-reflexThe efferent system has two subdivisions of activity:
i. The somatic nervous system sends signals to skeletal muscles only, which are under voluntary control
ii. The autonomic nervous system sends signals to smooth muscles, cardiac muscle, and glands, which are under involuntary control

The autonomic nervous system has two branches, the Sympathetic (“fight or flight”) Nervous System and the Parasympathetic (“rest and digest”) Nervous System. These two branches work together to stimulate and inhibit the organs of digestion and assimilation. The Parasympathetic and Sympathetic are designed to balance each other out, slowing down or speeding up organ functions as needed. In the case of stress, something most of us feel in the course of a day, this balance can go awry, giving rise to medical complaints, such as digestive or respiratory difficulties, headaches, insomnia, or anxiety.

There are several, overlapping theories medical science has tested to explain how and why acupuncture works. It has been established through research that acupuncture affects the nervous system. For example, chronic pain can be an indication something is wrong along a musculoskeletal pathway in the nervous system, and randomly controlled trials demonstrate the ability of acupuncture to reset the neural pathways, effectively eliminating the pain. Research on acupuncture’s effect on the nervous system is ongoing, as science continues to map the brain.

From our perspective at Mountaintop Acupuncture, keeping the nervous system healthy is important and it’s achievable. Establishing regularity in one’s daily habits, which include some form of exercise, eating well, breathing correctly, sleeping soundly, challenging the mind and resting the mind will tone the nervous system so that it responds appropriately when the true call for alarm arises.

http://mountaintopacupuncture.com/nervous-system-overview

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At Mountaintop Acupuncture, we have a combined 34 years of experience. To read more, please click here.

If you have questions and concerns about acupuncture treatment, we offer a free 20-minute phone session: click here for contact information to call or e-mail us. We practice in two New York City locations: Flatiron & Greenwich Village.

Insurance is welcome and accepted.

 

Keep Moving!

millet_the_gleanersA few months ago I (Carol) took the Memorial Sloan Kettering online oncology course for acupuncturists. For me, the recommendation for healthy people to exercise 30-60 minutes a day was the standout detail from the entire, 30+ hours of lectures.

That’s 30-60 minutes, seven days a week of formal exercise, not including the time you may spend traveling, changing, or cleaning up. And movement for our daily peregrinations, though better than nothing, doesn’t count.

Why, I wondered, did they advocate 30-60 minutes a day, and then it hit me: our DNA is programmed to move a lot more than we do in the 21st Century. It’s only been about 250 years since the Industrial Revolution, and many conveniences we take for granted didn’t exist before then. For our ancestors, chores and travel demanded constant physical effort; physiological evolution doesn’t change as quickly as our world has, so we have to accommodate our body’s needs by moving more.

Moving is one of the main ways to reduce your risk of getting cancer, because where there is blood flow, free radicals cannot pile up. When you regularly engage in steady, sustained movement, blood perfuses throughout your body.

Once I grasped this fact, I took up the challenge, and found it easy to justify the time spent, because being cancer-free is a compelling motivator. Viewed in this light, choosing to move is as simple as standing on one side of a line and stepping over it to the other side.

Regular exercise has many benefits, including leveling out the stresses encountered in a day.

If you are new to exercise, begin slowly and build up to it. You will find the body grows stronger exponentially, for it’s designed to do this. Expect some aches and pains as you make progress, but pay attention to the quality of pain to avoid injury (so you can continue working out!). If you overdo it, don’t give up, just take a break and get some acupuncture or a massage to speed the healing.

http://mountaintopacupuncture.com/keep-moving

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At Mountaintop Acupuncture, we have a combined 34 years of experience. To read more, please click here.

If you have questions and concerns about acupuncture treatment, we offer a free 20-minute phone session: click here for contact information to call or e-mail us. We practice in two New York City locations: Flatiron & Greenwich Village.

Insurance is welcome and accepted.


 

Exercises to Help Get Rid of a Stiff Neck

neck_exercisesStretching and strengthening of the neck muscles is not like stretching and strengthening the other muscles of the body. The neck is short and a contained space, so it’s best to keep a small range of motion, in keeping with muscle size and function.

If you give 5 minutes a day to exercise your neck, you will find little-by-little, over time, your neck will loosen up and the muscles will become stronger, making support of the head much easier with age.

The neck moves mainly on two planes: down (flexion) and up (extension), and side-to-side (rotation). Rolling the head in a circle needs to be done in a very specific way, not covered here, that moves the head in correct alignment.

Lifting the Head Off the Spine is the number one exercise you can do, at any time of day: ideally this lift becomes second-nature and is no longer a conscious effort. The exercises below are some suggestions as a starting point to loosen a stiff neck.

Floor stretches:
1. Lie on floor; you can have support for your neck with a bolster-shaped pillow or towel.
Slowly and very gently tuck your chin and press your lower skull to the floor. Hold for two breaths and relax. Repeat 10 times. This will stretch the muscles at the back of the neck.
2. Now you’ll engage the superficial side neck muscles. In the same position, turn your head to the left, raise your chin away from your opposite shoulder. Hold for one or two breaths, and come to a neutral position. Repeat on the other side, 5x each side. This will stretch the muscles at the side of the neck.
3. In the same floor position, allow the head to fall back to stretch the muscles at the front of the neck, holding for a comfortable amount of time, then bring the head and neck back into a neutral position.
4. Gently turn head side to side, slowly, 10-20x.

Seated stretches:
1. Locate the bone at the base of your skull behind your ears. Find the front lower corner, and pressing with your fingers, slide them back a bit until you feel a small indent that accommodates your fingertips. Using one or two fingers, press your skull into the fingers and rock your head chin up, chin down. The dual pressure relaxes the muscles at the back of the neck while stretching the deep muscles of the anterior neck.
2. This one is best done in the shower, standing under a steady stream of water:

a) Lift your left arm and place it on the top-right of you head, and gentle pull the head left while allowing the right shoulder muscles to drop. Hold for a few moments, and release. Repeat on the opposite side, 1x each. This stretches the side muscles of the neck.

b) Modification: Begin in same final position as a), then turn the face toward the armpit.
This stretches both the side of the neck and the deeper muscles that rotate the neck.

3. Rotate head and neck from the chin, beginning with small circles, 5-10x in each direction. Tuck as chin comes to bottom of the circle, and slightly stick it out at the top, 1 inch maximum range of motions in all directions.

Seated strengtheners:
These exercises use the principle of resistance to access the deeper muscles of the neck.

1. Clasp you hands behind the neck and press your head into your hands for a count of 1. This is very much like pressing the lower back of the head in the floor exercise, only you are isolating the very deep muscles of the neck, both front and back. Initiate the backward movement by tucking your chin as you press the head into the hands in a small movement.

2. See “Seated Stretches 1.” 2 inches below, dig your fingers into the posterior neck muscles strongly, enough to pivot your head, front and back, feeling the muscles when your head falls back and the bony base of the skull and the soft attachment tissue when your head rocks forward. Repeat 5-10x. This strengthens the deep muscles of the neck.

3. Turn head side-to-side slowly for 2-5 minutes. You can time your breathing so that you inhale as you turn one way, and exhale as you turn in the opposite direction. This is a form of meditation, so you’re killing two birds with one stone!

Practice recommendations to stretch and strengthen you neck:
1. Set aside 5 minutes each day where you’ll have quiet and be comfortable. I (Carol) start with the last exercise- turning the head slowly side-to-side while breathing deeply. This warms the neck muscles, which sets up nicely for the subsequent exercises. Choose one or two exercises or find new ones. Within a week you will notice a change, but allow one month of regular exercise before assessing results.

2. Practice proper alignment when sitting, standing, and walking. Qi gong, tai ji, and ba gua articulate the subtle movements of stretching and strengthening your core in a way that makes attaining proper alignment and pleasurable game. Lifting you head off your spine is a qi gong practice you can do anywhere.

http://mountaintopacupuncture.com/exercises-to-help-get-rid-of-a-stiff-neck

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At Mountaintop Acupuncture, we have a combined 34 years of experience. To read more, please click here.

If you have questions and concerns about acupuncture treatment, we offer a free 20-minute phone session: click here for contact information to call or e-mail us. We practice in two New York City locations: Flatiron & Greenwich Village.

Insurance is welcome and accepted.

 

Lifting the Head Off the Spine

neck_alignmentYears ago my (Carol) first qigong teacher made the provocative statement that the world would be a different place if everyone’s heads were correctly held, in the proper position.

What did he mean by this? Most of us have the bad habit of letting our heads fall back, with the chin lifted, or forward, in a slouched position. First of all, the average human head is 8 to 12 pounds! That’s a lot of weight to carry around, and we’re too distracted, between work and other stressors, to notice.

This mal-positioning creates a constant blockage, leading to headaches, neck strain, shoulder strain, and worse, nerve impingement leading to numbness and tingling down the arms, to the fingers.

Ready to give it a try? Lift your sternum (the bony area at the center of your chest), tuck your chin in slightly, and lift the crown of the head center skywards, giving a slight tug to the muscles at the back of the neck. At the same time, let your shoulders drop. You are now lifting your head off the spine! Practice: hold it for several seconds at a time, any time, and soon your body will crave the correct position. Some examples of practice are when waiting (for a red light to turn green, for the water to boil, when listening to someone speak, or when you’re on hold), meditating, or during your daily peregrinations when you are called upon to be still for a moment.

soft_palateA related area to this is inside the mouth, where there are a number of muscles no one ever thinks of. These are: Tensor veli palatini, Levator veli palatini, Palato glossus, Palato pharyngeus, and Musculus uvulae. When you practice lifting your head off the spine, think of softening the muscles of the soft palate. This will create more space to free up the components of the jaw and neck.

Lifting the head off the spine is really a qi gong practice in that the focus is on the bones, allowing the surrounding tissue to lengthen, become stronger, and relax all at once. When you hit the “sweet spot,” you’ll know it, and with practice, will be able to hold the position for longer moments, then periods, of time.

http://mountaintopacupuncture.com/lifting-the-head-off-the-spine

—————————–
At Mountaintop Acupuncture, we have a combined 34 years of experience. To read more, please click here.

If you have questions and concerns about acupuncture treatment, we offer a free 20-minute phone session: click here for contact information to call or e-mail us. We practice in two New York City locations: Flatiron & Greenwich Village.

Insurance is welcome and accepted.

 

Bagua For Runners

Bagua for Runnners

Bagua for Runnners

One morning, in my (Tom) qi gong and ba gua class, when we were walking in a circle, the teacher, mixed it up a little by getting us to jog, calling out directions of body alignment all the while. It dawned on me then that ba gua would be great for runners.

Sports medicine is my focus, so I see runners all the time in my practice. I would say the majority of injuries are due to muscle imbalances from improper training.

Muscle groups are divided functionally into agonistics and antagonistics. For example, when the hamstrings contract, the quadriceps stretch: this supports the femur (the upper leg bone), and allows the hamstrings to work correctly. Physiologically, quadricep strength should be 60% and hamstrings strength 40%. If this ratio is off, one can get what is called “runners knee.”

Ba gua training balances and connects the body as a whole so your movements are not isolated, but flow together, continuously. When the body is in proper alignment the muscles work efficiently, with much less stress.

The feet are extremely vital for standing, walking, and running. The feet reflect the whole body, so when the feet are tight this translates upward, causing problems elsewhere, for a structure is only as strong as its foundation. Ba gua works a lot on the feet to strengthen and open them, creating a good support.

Running can be hard on the leg joints due to the repetitive pounding on hard surfaces. When runners get tired, they commonly use the force of gravity versus muscles, which eventually takes its toll.

Bagua 8 trigrams

Bagua 8 trigrams

Ba gua challenges the body to incorporate multiple disciplines. You simultaneously work on the inhaling and exhaling of breath , the compression and decompression of joints, the winding and unwinding of tissue attached to bone, and on internal and external conscious focus. This multi-disciplinary approach creates a dynamic movement in whatever you do, so practice is not limited to class time, it’s something you take with you into your daily life.

Ba gua is based on the I Ching and is one of the three Chinese internal martial arts (tai ji and hsing yi are the other two). Qi gong is the basis of all three , and all offer tremendous health benefits.

Runners should always cross train to keep the whole body conditioned and reduce the chances of injuries. I highly recommend ba gua as an adjunct in training, because the body’s mechanics are explained in a new way that is both enjoyable and practical for the long-term.

http://mountaintopacupuncture.com/bagua-for-runners

—————————–
At Mountaintop Acupuncture, we have a combined 34 years of experience. To read more, please click here.

If you have questions and concerns about acupuncture treatment, we offer a free 20-minute phone session: click here for contact information to call or e-mail us. We practice in two New York City locations: Flatiron & Greenwich Village.

Insurance is welcome and accepted.