Archive for October, 2009


The Whole Person Phenomenon

Fifteen years ago when I was attending chiropractic college near Atlanta, Georgia, a fellow student shared with me that had doctor had discovered a small tumor in one of her breasts. I asked her what she intended to do about it. After all, we’d just spent two years studying the amazing powers of chiropractic treatment, but there was nothing in what we’d learned that indicated that it had any efficacy in eliminating tumors. She said, to my surprise, that she’d decided to “leave it alone for now,” even though her doctor told her that she was “dreaming” if she thought that the tumor would just disappear.  So, a recent paper in The Journal of the American Medical Association, and reported in the New York Times online, was particularly exciting for me. The paper noted findings, over a period of two decades, that indicated that many small tumors would likely not be a problem if they were left alone, undiscovered by screening. It stated, in fact, that many of these small tumors were destined to stop growing on their own or shrink, or even, at least in the case of some breast cancers, disappear.

“It is becoming increasingly clear that cancers require more than mutations to progress,” said Dr. Barnett Kramer, associate director for disease prevention at the National Institutes of Health. “They need the cooperation of surrounding cells and even,” he said, “the whole organism, the person.” He said that the immune system or hormone levels, for example, can squelch or fuel a tumor.

Cancer cells and precancerous cells are so common that nearly everyone by middle age or old age is riddled with them, according to Thea Tlsty, a professor of pathology at the University of California, San Francisco. She said that that fact was discovered in autopsy studies of people who died of other causes, with no idea that they had cancer cells or precancerous cells. They didn’t have large tumors or symptoms of cancer. “The really interesting question,” Dr. Tlsty said, “is not so much why do we get cancer as why don’t we get cancer?”

For much more on these exceptional findings, go to nytimes.com.  My friend, by the way? She’s a happy, healthy chiropractor in Los Angeles, California, these days, and the mother of a beautiful two-year-old girl!

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As a chiropractor, I treat many older people. Over the years, I have noted that as men and women age, the quality of sleep they get at night alters drastically, especially among women who are post-menopausal. I’d often attributed the sleep differences between my particular male and female chiropractic patients, to stress levels, mainly because the women who complained about not getting enough sleep were more “tightly-wound” than most of men who came to see me. However, a new study conducted by researchers in the Netherlands, indicates that even though  elderly women in a sleep study reported shorter and a poorer quality of sleep, they were actually getting longer and less-interrupted sleep than the elderly men in the study.

The participants, aged 59 to 97 years old, were asked to wear an accelerometer that measured their sleep activity, and also to keep a sleep diary for six consecutive nights. According to the study, the female participants reported an increase in the time it took them to fall asleep, a shorter sleep time, and poorer sleep quality than the male participants reported. However, after examining data from the accelerometer measurements researchers discovered that the women had actually slept longer and experienced less sleep disturbances than the men. In fact, the study found that men actually overestimated the amount of sleep they got and the quality of their sleep. In other words, the men may have been  “daydreaming” about getting a good night’s sleep!

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