| 01/01/06 | NEWSLETTER | carlstonmd.com |
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| Dear Patients | HOME | |
Happy New Year! Best, Michael Carlston, M.D. |
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| In This Issue: | INDEX | |
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| SLEEP AND WEIGHT LOSS | TOP | |
Last time I wrote about the connection
between insufficient sleep and weight, including new understanding of
the hormone changes that mediate those effects. I neglected to mention
the lifestyle change which is quite probably one of the factors driving
our obesity epidemic. In the last 40 years the percentage of young American
adults who sleep less than eight hours has nearly doubled. That is a
big change. |
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| PEDOMETERS | TOP | |
Many of you know that in keeping
with a number of medical organizations (American College of Sports Medicine
and American Academy of Family Physicians, among them), I advocate the
10,000 Steps a Day program to increase physical activity. Using a pedometer
is a great way to learn how much/little we are currently moving around.
It is also a great way to help yourself reach the targeted activity level.
Most importantly to me, though, is that you can use the pedometer to
GRADUALLY increase movement so that you don’t get hurt by trying
to do too much too fast. |
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| BOOK CHAPTER | TOP | |
| Due to my peculiar mix of interests, I do quite a bit beyond my clinical practice. One part of that is my work for the publishers of medical journals and textbooks. The third edition of one of the standard medical texts in the field (Fundamentals of Complementary and Integrative Medicine - Sanders, Elsevier) just came out, which includes my chapter on homeopathy. It is a good book with comprehensive coverage of a very broad subject matter. Although aimed at health sciences students and practitioners, if you are interested in a solid overview I strongly recommend it. | ||
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| As those in our area not displaced by flooding huddle indoors,
this is a good time to talk a bit about vitamin D. This vitamin has been
hanging at the top of the scientific hot list for the past year or more.
There are many reasons for this. A recent meta-analysis of 63 studies published over the past 40 years showed marked reduction in the risk of several forms of cancer among those with higher levels of vitamin D. The risk of breast and ovarian cancer was cut by 35% and colon cancer by 50%. The authors of this study concluded that a daily dose of 1,000 iu/day might be ideal. Other data show that low blood levels of vitamin D are very common (over 50% in some populations). Even in areas of the world were the combination of people with light skin and high sunshine create the expectation that vitamin D levels should be fine, we are finding that this is not the case. In addition to the production of vitamin D in the skin from sunlight exposure, we can get it from eating eggs, meat and oily fish. This unexpected finding of insufficiency intrigues me because of my questions about dietary calcium intake. It is clear that Americans suffer many consequences from inadequate calcium metabolism. At the same time, the RDIs for calcium are uncomfortably high for me. I accept the problem, but philosophically rebel against numbers that are nearly impossible to achieve through a good diet. Certainly this gap can be narrowed by consuming highly absorbable forms of calcium in association with magnesium and, massively important, getting sufficient physical activity so that your body makes new healthy bone. Adding vitamin D to the equation may get us to a sensible balance. |
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| TOP | ||
| For consumers, the Medicare Drug program is confusing, disastrous, or both, depending upon your perspective. Those of you who want to try to make sense of it or complain about it can attend a dialog session with Congresswoman Lynn Woolsey on Monday, January 9 from 10-11 at Finley Community Center in Santa Rosa, or from 2-3 pm the same day in Olney Hall at the College of Marin. For more information contact Emmie Morgan at 707-542-7182. | ||
| HOME | TOP | |