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Parkinson's
Disease & TAI CHI THERAPY |
by:
Bill
Douglas |
Copyright
2005 Bill Douglas
In a special to CNN, the Mayo Clinic's mayoclinic.com
reported that, "Parkinson's disease is progressive,
meaning the signs and symptoms become worse
over time. But although Parkinson's may
eventually be disabling, the disease often
progresses gradually, and most people have
many years of productive living after a
diagnosis." This would indicate that there
may be effective interventions that could
perhaps slow the progress of the disease.
When we get such a diagnosis, our first
reaction might be to withdraw and give up.
However, the old adage "use it or lose it"
tells us that just the opposite is true.
If you have Parkinson's, you'd likely be
best off to use everything your body is,
every which way, on a regular basis.
Tai Chi movement's gentle balance enhancing
motions can obviously help the Parkinson's
patient by helping to reduce the gradual
loss of balance that Parkinson's sufferers
often experience. However, there may be
much more it offers. For example, Tai Chi
movements rotate the human body in about
95% of the ways the body can move, when
a long form is practiced. This is far beyond
what other exercise offers, and in fact
the closest would be several swimming strokes,
which together would only rotate the body
in about 65% of the ways it can move. For
Parkinson's sufferers, or anyone for that
matter, this would indicate that by "using"
95% of the body's possible motion several
times a week, the possibility of "losing"
the ability to do so diminishes accordingly.
This isn't rocket science, but simple common
sense.
Yet, perhaps Parkinson's patients have even
more to gain from Tai Chi. A few years ago
I taught several classes at local medical
centers. I was continually frustrated because
although I'd seen emerging reports that
Tai Chi was beneficial to people with Parkinson's
Disease, or arthritis, or chronic hypertension,
etc., even though the departments that specialized
in those conditions were often just down
the hall from my Tai Chi class . . . they
might as well have been a million miles
away. Because the physicians who ran those
departments were either ignorant of or unwilling
to refer their patients to the possibilities
that Tai Chi offered their lives.
I remember though, that at one medical center
a visionary neurologist began to refer patients
with balance disorders to my Tai Chi classes
and the result was very beneficial for his
patients. Another physician actually wrote
prescriptions for my Tai Chi classes to
treat the chronic hypertension of his patients,
who'd seen a significant drop in their blood
pressure since beginning the classes weeks
before. A clinical psychologist brought
me in to teach Qigong (Chi Kung) meditation
and Tai Chi to her patient group to enhance
their sense of well being and provide effective
stress management training. So, even back
then some physicians were seeing the potential
Tai Chi offered their clients, and even
more are now, but the number of physicians
who are still not informing their patients
of Tai Chi's direct therapeutic or at the
least adjunct therapy benefits to their
patient's efforts to deal with their conditions
and life, is increasingly indefensible in
this day and age. Given the research that
has exposed the many physical, mental, and
emotional benefits Tai Chi offers, for physicians
to not educate themselves on this and share
their knowledge with each and every patient
is tantamount to mal-practice. Health educators
should likewise be making such therapies
part of their medical student education
programs as well.
Tai Chi for Parkinson's is being recommended
increasingly by support groups and some
progressive medical centers, but until everyone
that has Parkinson's knows about it, then
our work at World Tai Chi & Qigong Day is
not done, nor is the medical community's.
There are many obvious reasons everyone
with Parkinson's should be doing Tai Chi,
but it's the ones that are not yet obvious
that may be the most intriguing. One obvious
reason is that Tai Chi is the most powerful
balance and coordination enhancing exercise
known. In many studies at major universities
Tai Chi was found to be TWICE as effective
in reducing falls as the other balance enhancing
exercises being studied. For people with
Parkinson's, who often see their balance
deteriorate as their condition progresses,
it is unforgivable for them to not be informed
of Tai Chi's potential benefits at the earliest
stage possible while their balance is still
good.
Now, regarding the less obvious reasons
Tai Chi may benefit Parkinson's patients.
Both my wife and daughter, who co-taught
a Tai Chi class together noticed that a
young man with severe Parkinson's tremors
. . . completely lost his tremors once he
joined the class in flowing through the
Tai Chi movements in class. In another class
I was teaching an older man with advanced
Parkinson's attended my classes for many
months, and he always came in very slow
with his walker. Once we began the Tai Chi
movements he no longer used his walker,
and had learned the entire long form of
Tai Chi I taught, which was over 15 minutes
of continuous changing forms. His form was
unique and tailored for his limitations,
but nonetheless a challenging set of exercises
he was able to accomplish without the use
of his walker. What do these anecdotal experiences
portend for others with Parkinson's? I don't
know, but there should be massive research
dollars coming from the National Institutes
of Health to find out. Given the promise
Tai Chi seems to offer people on so many
profound physical, emotional, and mental
fronts from preliminary research, the current
total research money earmarked for complimentary
and alternative medicine's (CAM) is a mere
pittance.
The National Center for Complementary and
Alternative Medicine (NCCAM), now in its
sixth year, supports more than 300 research
projects and has an estimated budget of
over $120 million for 2005 (up from $50
million in 1999). Total spending on CAM
by all NIH institutes and centers is expanding
as well, and is expected to reach $315 million
by 2005.
Sounds like a lot? However, $120 million
is less than "one half of one percent" of
the total NIH FY2005 budget. According to
the Association of American Medical Colleges
the NIH's total annual budget for FY 2005
is $28.8 billion (http://www.aaas.org/spp/rd/05pch8.htm).
Remember, we are talking about only spending
much much less than one half of one percent
to study an exercise that preliminary research
has shown to: n Lower High Blood Pressure
(about 1/3 of Americans have hypertension
- roughly over 90 million Americans) n Boost
Immune Function profoundly (a study sited
at drkoop.com indicates that a Tai Chi practicing
group was TWICE as resistant to the shingles
virus, and researchers believed this would
carry over to other viral resistance as
well.) n Dramatically reduce falling injuries
by about half (complications from falling
injuries in older Americans is the 6th leading
cause of death for seniors in America)
If Tai Chi only addressed this chronic condition
affecting 1/3 of Americans, while boosting
the immune system of all practitioners profoundly,
and cutting in half the sixth leading cause
of death for seniors, without any negative
side effects, that would seem to be, for
the rational person a reason for pouring
massive resources into researching it further.
However, Tai Chi's benefits only begin with
the above preliminary findings. We also
know that it may very well relieve depression,
anxiety, and mood disturbance, as well as
reduce ADHD symptoms in teenagers diagnosed
with Attention Deficit and Hyperactivity
Disorder. There are indications that Tai
Chi may greatly reduce or even eliminate
chronic pain conditions, and lessen allergic
and asthmatic reactions, and improve overall
respiratory function.
My point is, "where is the massive attention
this would garner on talk shows, and in
health newspaper sections, if this were
a drug or surgery that could provide such
a seemingly massive breakthrough in health
treatment?" Peter Chowka, in a brilliant
two part series for Natural Health Line,
entitled "Complementary & Alternative Medicine
in 2000," wrote, "Conflicts of interest
are not uncommon in most aspects of life.
But in medicine, the biggest business in
the U.S. (over $1.5 trillion a year constituting
over 14 percent of the Gross Domestic Product,
according to the National Academy of Science's
Institute of Medicine report issued January
10, 2001), serious conflicts are particularly
well entrenched." Mr. Chowka wrote of physicians
like Dr. Marcia Angell voicing concerns
of the "troubling" result massive research
money from drug and medical-equipment companies
was having on the scientific process. In
the New England Journal of Medicine's May
18, 2000 issue, Dr. Angel wrote an editorial
entitled, "Is Academic Medicine for Sale?"
She wrote, "As we spoke with research psychiatrists
about writing an editorial on the treatment
of depression . . . we found very few who
did not have financial ties to drug companies
that make antidepressants. . .The problem
is by no means unique to psychiatry. We
routinely encounter similar difficulties
in finding editorialists in other specialties,
particularly those that involve the heavy
use of expensive drugs and devices."
So, who can make a multi-billion dollar
fortune teaching Tai Chi to people? No one
can. Tai Chi cannot be bottled, or mass
marketed. It is a decentralized labor intensive
industry that employees many people, but
keeps the profits small and local. Yes,
there are videos and DVDs that teach Tai
Chi effectively, but ultimately even those
who utilize videos are drawn to live class
like structures. As I mentioned before with
the "anecdotal" experiences of my students
with Parkinson's, Tai Chi seems to offer
something profoundly beneficial to the quality
of life of Parkinson's sufferers. It needs
further study. We are in a catch 22, where
many health professionals feel they cannot
recommend Tai Chi because too much of the
preliminary research is anecdotal. However,
when Tai Chi is jockeying for position to
get a crumb of the .5% of total NIH money
going to ALL complimentary and alternative
medical therapies . . . the result will
be many long years of millions of people
suffering needlessly from conditions or
symptoms of those conditions that Tai Chi
could likely safely lessen or even eliminate.
WHAT DO WE KNOW ABOUT TAI CHI AND PARKINSONS?
Tai Chi is being recommended by some forward
thinking medical institutions already. The
Cleveland Clinic of Neuroscience Center
encourages Parkinson's Disease patients
to seek out a hobby or activity they can
enjoy and stick with such as "Tai Chi" and
other activities. The Alexian Neurosciences
Institute in Illinois offers a course in
their The Parkinson's Disease and Movement
Disorders Center. Also, the American Parkinson's
Disease Association at Stanford University
Medical Center, in it's "Beyond Pills....
Alternative Approaches to Coping with Parkinson's
Disease" program, offered "Tai Chi, The
Art for Living with Parkinson's" by Mwezo
& Jane of Kujiweza Healing Arts. (Learn
more at: http://parkinsons.stanford.edu/symposium.html).
The Parkinson's Society of Canada recommends
Tai Chi for Parkinson's patients, suggesting
"Tai Chi may prevent or at least slow down
the onset of degenerative diseases; in the
long run, it can reduce need for rehabilitative
care." (http://www.parkinsons.ca/managing.html#taichi)
In the United Kingdom a Parkinson's Tai
Chi study was conducted at Camborne Redruth
Community Hospital, Cornwall. Their conclusion
of the study was such, "Tai Chi training
was well tolerated by PD patients in this
study, but had no measurable effect on motor
performance using UPDRS score or GAG time.
There was a non-significant improvement
in quality of life scores (PDQ 39). Larger
studies would be needed fully to evaluate
the value and efficacy of Tai Chi. However
our results are encouraging, and provide
evidence for its safety and tolerability
and would support the feasibility of further
study." (http://www.pdcornwall.org.uk/showarticle.pl?n=30&id=81)
WCHS TV during a news report focusing on
Tai Chi's ability to boost immune system
function, also reported that "Tai Chi has
also been shown to help illnesses such as
Parkinson's disease, multiple sclerosis,
fibromyalgia and arthritis." (http://www.wchstv.com/newsroom/healthyforlife/2177.shtml)
The Neurology Channel reported, "The slow
flowing movements of Tai Chi help maintain
flexibility, balance, and relaxation. The
Struthers Parkinson's Center in Minneapolis,
which teaches a modified form of Tai Chi,
consistently reports benefits achieved by
patients in all stages of Parkinson's."
(http://www.neurologychannel.com/parkinsonsdisease/surgery.shtml)
Physicians at the Mayo Clinic recommend
Tai Chi for Parkinson's therapy, under their
Parkinson's "self-care" section for avoiding
falls, where they suggest you "Ask your
doctor or physical therapist about exercises
that improve balance, especially tai chi.
Originally developed in China more than
1,000 years ago, tai chi uses slow, graceful
movements to relax and strengthen muscles
and joints. "
At a popular health website called "RemedyFind.com"
viewers can vote on therapies they've found
benefited their condition, or didn't benefit
it. The rating there for Tai Chi as a Parkinson's
therapy received a rating of 9.8 out of
a possible 10. (http://remedyfind.com/rem.asp?ID=13945)
A Study at the University of Florida in
Jacksonville found that patients who attended
Tai Chi classes for one hour each week for
12-weeks were less likely than a group of
control patients to experience an increase
in the severity of their condition and a
decrease in motor function. . . .[of alternative
therapies] the most popular therapies being
Tai Chi, yoga, and acupuncture. (http://www.worldhealth.net/p/275,1526.html),
(SOURCE/REFERENCE: Reported by www.reutershealth.com
on the 13th November 2002)
The Atlanta Journal Constitution reported,
"Parkinson's Meets It's Match in Tai Chi."
In this article they write that Dr. Mark
Guttman, director of the Centre for Movement
Disorders in Markham, Ontario, recommends
people with Parkinson's do exercises that
involve a lot of stretching, similar to
the movements of tai chi.
"Tai chi is wonderful; it can help people
with disabilities as well as people with
Parkinson's," he says. He added that studies
on animals show exercise induces a change
in the brain that prevents the symptom's
of Parkinson's from emerging.
The Tai Chi teacher for this program, Ms.
Embree, spoke of how people with fibromyalgia,
multiple sclerosis, cystic fibrosis, and
Parkinson's often attend her classes . .
. "Doctors are now sending people here,"
adds Ms Embree. (for the entire article,
go to: PARKINSON'S MEETING IT'S MATCH IN
TAI CHI, April, 13, 2005, http://www.ajc.com/health/content/health/0304/lvtaichi7.html)
At the National Parkinson's Foundation site,
Melanie M. Brandabur, MD NPF Center of Excellence,
University of Illinois at Chicago and Jill
Marjama-Lyons, MD NPF Center of Excellence,
Shands Jacksonville, wrote, "Most patients
derive a great deal of benefit from today's
medications and surgical therapies for Parkinson's
Disease . . . However, benefits of these
therapies can be limited. As time goes by,
the medications may not seem as effective
as they once were. Side effects or unpredictable
response may develop. Surgical therapies
are not curative and often treat only selected
aspects of Parkinson's Disease. For these
reasons, patients may decide to explore
other modalities, such as massage therapy,
Tai Chi, yoga, or herbal preparations to
augment their Parkinson's medication . .
. Many patients with Parkinson's Disease
have become interested in complementary
therapies to supplement medications and
other traditional PD treatments. These physicians
also suggest that as Tai Chi and other modalities
benefits are exposed by clinical research,
physicians will advocate their use more
widely. (http://www.parkinson.org/site/pp.asp?c=9dJFJLPwB&b=238635)
World Tai Chi & Qigong Day joins a growing
number of health professionals specializing
in fields like Parkinson's who believe that
much more research needs to be done to illuminate
the full spectrum of benefits Tai Chi offers
all people as well as those specifically
with chronic conditions. This will enable
more physicians to make Tai Chi a regular
prescription written as therapy or adjunct
therapy for a host of maladies many are
already enjoying the benefits of for their
condition, but paying out of pocket for.
Ultimately more and more health insurance
plans should and will make Tai Chi classes
a deductible medical expense for their clients.
The end result of this shift may portend
the savings of hundreds of billions of dollars
annually in saved health care costs as patients
are better trained in self care techniques,
training the great visionary Thomas Edison
referred to as "the care and maintenance
of the human frame," which Edison envisioned
would more and more reduce the need for
expensive surgeries and life long dependence
on medications as human beings maximized
their own self healing abilities. Traditional
Chinese Medicine has spent centuries developing
and evolving self healing technologies like
Tai Chi. Now the west can learn about their
results, and physicians can prescribe them
to their patients and our entire society
will be healthier and more abundant for
it.
About the author:
Bill Douglas is the Tai Chi Expert at DrWeil.com,
Founder of World T'ai Chi & Qigong Day (held
in 50 nations each year), and has authored
and co-authored several books including
a ##1 best selling Tai Chi book "The Complete
Idiot's Guide to T'ai Chi & Qigong." Bill's
been a Tai Chi source for The Wall Street
Journal, New York Times, etc. You can learn
more about Tai Chi & Qigong, and also contact
Bill Douglas at http://www.worldtaichiday.org
Circulated by Bandoni
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