on the go physical therapy

Sleep and Health

Feel sluggish? Having an ache and pain that just won’t go away? Poor sleep may be to blame,as sleep is vital to health and recovery. A good night’s sleep is credited with restoring healthy brain function and physical well-being. Basically, the way you feel when you’re awake depends on how well you sleep. Disturbed sleep is often due to various stressors with the most common reported being persistent pain, depression, and/or anxiety. In fact, a recent study by the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) found more than 35% of adults are not getting enough sleep on a regular basis. The American Academy of Sleep Medicine and the Sleep Research Society recommends that adults sleep at least 7 hours each night to promote optimal health and well-being. Sleeping less than 7 hours is associated with an increased risk of developing chronic conditions such as obesity, diabetes, high blood pressure, heart disease, stroke, and frequent mental distress.

Does pain lead to poor sleep, and poor sleep leads to pain, becoming a vicious cycle? A study of sleep disturbance among chronic pain patients found greater self-reported pain intensity among those patients who rated themselves as poor sleepers (Morin 1998). It could be argued that more pain means less sleep, but the evidence points in the opposite direction. Experimental studies of healthy subjects suggest that poor sleep further exacerbates pain (Smith 2004). Sleep triggers healing and enhances tissue nutrition. Sleep helps restore balance to hormone levels, which keeps your appetite in check and strengthens the immune system. Sleep helps your brain form new pathways to learn skills and remember information, thus causing less stress. Sleep helps you make better decisions and improves your problem-solving skills. It sets the stage for improved mood and a positive outlook, so long as you wake with a good cup of coffee.

Sleep is a behavior, not an identity. Most of us have experienced some sleepless nights, but it is important not to accept disturbed sleep as the norm. Whether it’s recovery from surgery or healing from a chronic injury, sleep is a necessary element of the healing process. Once we have emerged alive and awake from the tissue trauma, the long journey ahead is far less difficult if we develop good sleep behaviors.

Looking to improve your sleep? Here are a few tips

#1: It’s tough to sleep if you’re not tired. Work up a sweat at least 10-15 minutes every day.

#2: Avoid alcohol and opiates as they are depressants. They will make you drowsy but the effect is restlessness and disturbed sleep. If you rely on any substance to sleep, consider trying some natural methods. A glass of tart juice or some chamomile tea will help relax you before bedtime. The use of aroma sticks with lavender oil has been shown to improve sleep quality in a recent study on sleep problems in cancer patients (Dyer 2016).

#3: Balanced nutrition is important to physical health and improved sleep.

Want to learn more about how sleep could be affecting your pain, lack of energy, or weight gain? Contact Travis today.

Training Around Pain

“The pain will go away on its own”

“If I just stop going to the gym, it will get better”

“No pain, no gain” “Pain is weakness leaving the body”

At On the Go Physical Therapy, we hear statements like these from friends, family, CrossFit athletes and clients all the time. Maybe you’ve been thinking this yourself.

The Body Is Resiliant

Our bodies have an amazing ability to heal.  Have you ever had a callous rip during a workout? Within a week, it is usually all healed up, right? Does that stop you from coming into the gym and working out the next day. Nope, you just slap some tape on it, put on your grips and move on. When it comes down to it there really isn’t much difference at the cellular level between a callous and the muscles, tendons, ligaments, bones and cartilage in the rest of your body. Our bodies are continuously repairing and healing, just at different rates depending on the extent of the injury and the tissue or bone affected. 

“So you are saying the pain will go away on its own?”

Maybe yes, maybe no. The injured tissue will heal over time, but often it can be more sensitive or weakened if not properly loaded during this healing period. This could potentially lead to pain lasting even after the tissue issue has been resolved. A skilled physical therapist can help you learn how to modify your workouts, load the tissue early and progressively and prevent complications down the road when you try to jump back into CrossFit, running, or any other activity you enjoy. This means that you can come back from your injury stronger than you were prior to your injury.

“What if I just stop going to the gym or doing the activity that aggravates my injury?”

There is nothing inherently bad about the activity that is aggravating your injury. Our bodies are meant to do all kinds of activities and be in all types of postures/positions. Sure it may be helpful to pause an activity that is making symptoms worse, but only for a limited time so that you avoid overloading the injured tissue. This does not mean stop being active. It is way more important that you continue being active for your CARDIOVASCULAR HEALTH and in order to stave off chronic disease.  Not a single person is dying from low back pain or shoulder pain, but shockingly 70% of the world IS DYING FROM CHRONIC DISEASE. A skilled physical therapist can help put the fire out on your pain all while keeping you active in doing the things you love. Be wary of doctors and other medical professionals that tell you to stop doing an activity or tell you that you WILL NEVER or SHOULD NEVER do “xyz” again. That’s usually bad advice and most of us wouldn’t listen to them anyway.

“No pain, no gain” “Pain is weakness leaving the body”

Should you avoid all pain no matter what? No, current research shows that there can be some benefit to painful exercise, but when we get into these painful episodes we need to identify what is off and what got you into this predicament in the first place.  Usually it is one of two things. You are doing TOO MUCH TOO SOON and your body has not adapted to that activity. You are essentially OVERLOADING your tissues and tissues do not like that. The other factor can be your lifestyle habits are off: poor sleep, diet, high stress levels, overall body inflammation.  These things need to be discovered and addressed or you just keep adding fuel to the fire.  If a change isn’t made, you run the risk of further injury or you end up turning this acute episode of pain (short period of pain) into chronic pain (long period of pain). 

 

Contact Travis or call/text (781)691-4378 to learn more about how you can put out the fire on your pain and stay active through injury.