chiro

What's in an Adjustment?

Why are you getting adjusted? To feel better? To reduce pain levels? To hear a pop? There are a multitude of reasons I will have someone walk in the door and want to be adjusted (though I will admit that pain is probably the number one reason); but what if the benefits are so much more than just pain relief? What if chiropractic care can provide something that is more than just a quick release or a quick limbering up? The reality is that chiropractic care has been shown to be extremely helpful in relieving pain and providing long-lasting relief, but it also has benefits that are over and above just some basic pain relief!

 

Let's start with joint mobility. Joints, like every other part of the body, require nutrition and a good blood supply to remain healthy. But they also require something else. Joints require motion! In fact, motion is as vital to a joint as air is to the lungs. Motion allows the joint to circulate fluid, receive proper nutrition and maintain its structural integrity. In fact, joints that no longer move will degenerate and often rather quickly. A joint that has undergone degeneration loses its ability to move fully and smoothly. Think of a degenerate joint like a hinge that's been left in the rain for a while. If the hinge doesn’t seize altogether, it's hard to move; it creaks and groans when you forcefully get it moving again (sound familiar?). Chiropractic adjustments work to restore a joint's full ranges of motion and, just as importantly, they work to maintain those ranges. A well-adjusted spine can be thought of as a hinge that’s regularly greased and not left out in the rain to rust.

 

So having great moving joints is important because it means you can use those joints for years to come. But there is still more yet, there are deeper benefits of the chiropractic adjustment as well! To understand the further benefits we must first understand something called allostatic load. Allostatic load can be defined as the sum of all the stressors your body has to deal with. The more stressors, the higher the load. As this load of stressors increases, it moves your body into a state of sympathetic dominance. This state is most commonly known as your fight or flight response. In short bursts this state is beneficial, it results in higher wakefulness and higher energy output. But this increased energy output comes at a cost, our bodies give up on their basic maintenance. Things like sleep and digestion are put on the back burner, and cellular healing is also slower to work. If we remain in this state for a few hours our bodies are able to recover fine, even a few days and our bodies can get back to healing themselves with little consequence. However, if left for weeks to months we can start to run into some real issues. Chronic stress can lead to higher sensitivity to pain, increases in headaches, insomnia, and low energy levels. So how do we combat this state of sympathetic dominance? This is where chiropractic comes in. Chiropractic care and adjustments work specifically to reduce your allostatic load. By decreasing the physical and neurological stressors on your body, chiropractic is able to help you out of this state of fight or flight. When your body is no longer feeling tension and joints are free to as they are designed, your body can better divert energy to where it is more needed.

 

The best thing about chiropractic is not that it gets you out of pain, the best thing about chiropractic is that it allows your body to better modulate itself and do its job properly. After all, our bodies are designed to be healthy, we just have to make sure there's nothing getting in the way. When our bodies are moving well and the joints are able to go through their full ranges, when our allostatic load is low, our bodies are able to maintain themselves and make sure we have the energy to focus on other things.

-Dr. Benjamin Davey D.C.

Let's Stop Sleep Shaming

“Get out of bed! Its 10 a.m.!” Something that I, like many teenagers heard on many Saturdays. The common stereotype of teenagers being lazy and sleeping for way too long is well known. But why is it the case? Is it just that teenagers have a natural phase of being lazy or is there more to it? On another rather odd note, I often hear people bragging about just how little sleep they get by on. Is that a good thing I mean more hours awake in a day means more hours to get things done. Well, the reality is perhaps not what many teenagers or their parents want to hear.

The reality is that sleep is essential to the body and not in the ways that many of us think. Yes, it is absolutely important to sleep so our bodies have time to rest, but it’s also the time when your body cleans out the garbage and when it builds! In fact, one of the most important things that your body does when it sleeps is to build. The vast majority of Human Growth Hormone is released at night between 10 P.M. and 2:00 A.M. and the hormone is what helps your body build! In the younger population, this is essential! Building muscles requires a lot of energy all on its own. Now throw in new brain connections and bone growth and the average child is a full-blown construction site. This is one of the reasons why sleep is so important for adolescence and why babies sleep so much. Now, before all the teenagers go running to their parents about how making them get up early is unjust and their parents are stunting their growth, there are several things that they might not be doing as well as they think. The first is that not all sleep is equal. Research has shown that getting to bed early, having consistent bedtimes and avoiding screen time right before bed will vastly improve a person’s sleep. Your body likes to know what’s coming and having an early, consistent bedtime means your body’s internal clock is getting prepped for the night’s work as the bedtime approaches. The second problem that many teenagers (and older adults) have is using their cellphones or watching tv right before bed. The main issue is that the bright light tricks the brain into thinking that its actually day time. Your body stops its sleep preparation and instead starts getting revved up for what it thinks is another day. This leads to a hard time falling asleep and poorer sleep once you actually do fall asleep. 

The bottom line is that sleep is essential for everyone and when a body is under a lot of strain its going to need even more. Trying to get by on as little sleep as possible is like trying to drive your car for as long as possible with no oil changes and bad gas. You can do it and it might be beneficial in the short term, but you will end up paying for it down the road. Everyone (especially our younger population) could use a little more QUALITY sleep will no cell phones, or T.V.s and preferably before midnight.