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Dr. Needles'
Passport to Pain Free Living - A Guide to Health Restoration and Rejuvenation
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As
we sleep, dream, or are awake, vibrations inside our brain's nerve cells
resonate in symphony and harmony with the world. Thoughts emotions and
perceptions all affect our brains. UNIQUE FEATURES OF THE BRAIN The brain secretes chemicals and makes proteins (memories are encoded as proteins. Electrical energy is uniformly dispersed. When awake, the brain is energized by histamine (hypothalamus), serotonin (raphe-nucleus), dopamine (midbrain) and noradrenaline (locus coeruleus). Neurons in the brain also fire regularly in specific patterns. They are orchestrated by a system that inhibits neuron activity (via GABA an anterior hypothalamus transmitter).
THE BRAIN CLOCK Our brain clock is longer than 24 hours. It must be reset each day. We sleep for 90 minutes at a time. During the day this 90-minute cycle is suppressed but we still have behavioral changes every 90 minutes in our ability to concentrate, our appetite, and fatigue levels. THE MIND The
mind is all the information in the brain. It is a jack in the box that
springs into action when a neurochemical switch is flipped. Our minds
can jump from subject to subject but at any given moment we can zero
in on a single idea or emotion. MEMORY Some memory must be brought to consciousness, other is present without awareness as we acquire certain skills and perform them without awareness (automatic motor skills). Memory retrieval is automatic. The hippocampus is essential to memory and connects to the amydala, resulting in repeat behavior with emotions. It processes new data and records it and sends it to the cortex where it is stored for the future. New selective memory links the mammary bodies to the hippocampus. Reflex automatic primordial memory connects to the upper pons with its amydala connections. Orientation is important for storage of memory. Knowing who you are, what day it is, and where you are at all times, are crucial to help memory storage. DREAMING Dreaming
is a loss of perception and orientation. Dreamng allows a freedom to
create a false scenario effortlessly. We dream in order to forget. When
we dream we don't wake up, can't see our surroundings, nor feel heat.
Perception, instinct, action, sensation, bad judgment, awareness, orientation,
and recent memory are all impaired while dreaming. There is no self-awareness
to time, place or persons. All external sensory signals are also blocked.
Norephenerine and seratonin are reduced during dreaming. Our muscles
and sensory nerves become paralyzed. SLEEP Sleep
self activates every 90 minutes at night. A coma like state is replaced
by dreaming. The brain is only activated 10-20% when we sleep. Yet this
is enough to eliminate consciousness. A great deal of information processing
occurs even when we sleep. This automatic processing helps us to be
creative and organization. Simply, the brain is never ever turned off.
As we start to fall asleep we are unable to focus our attention. Brain
energy is diminished, and we feel tired and fatigued. THE RETICULAR FORMATION (RE) The
RE controls the level of activation. It begins in the medulla just above
the spinal cord. The RE is the central core of the brain. By resetting
levels of activation in the brain, it can coordinate all brain activity.
In short, it is the heart of the brain. This intricate network of cells
can receive messages and send them everywhere to the brain. THALMUS The
thalmus has its own on-off switch for consciousness. As it stops vibrating
we fall asleep and consciousness is impaired. When one needs to pay
attention to details the lateral geniculate body of the thalamus must
be stimulated. It is the organ of being awake. It is the final gateway
of outside information entering the brain cortex. It integrates information
from the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex. It is hard to wipe out the
thalamic cortical system because it fans out. LANGUAGE, LEARNING, AND ATTENTION Language
is organized in the dominant hemisphere and is on top of the cortex
and up front to the forehead. The angle of the temporal and frontal
lobes is the language area. The front part is named Broca's area (cant
translate words into speech); the posterior area is Wernicke's area
(cant understand words). BRAIN AND BODY TEMPERATURE Body and brain temperature fluctuate 1-½ degrees every day as we sleep and dream and awaken within the circadian rhythm. Our biological clock in the hypothalamus regulates the body temperature. The temperature drops as we get sleepy and stays low as we sleep. The temperature rises in the late morning and it is difficult to sleep. When brains get hot or cold they go out of whack. Babies, who still have brain circuits developing, can get seizures with temperature shifts. EFFECT
OF ANESTHESIA ON THE BRAIN During
anesthesia, gases given off cause structural changes in the brain proteins.
These disrupt our consciousness by limiting the electrical activity
of the brain. These brain protein molecules are very sensitive to changes.
The energy of the water pockets in molecules are reduced. This disrupts
the neuronal membrane dynamics and synaptic transmission. STAYING AWAKE Staying
awake beyond our normal limits make us feel anxiety, stress, and fatigue.
Physical activity as walking and exercise decrease our demand on thinking
and attention and can reduce anxiety and fatigue feelings. We can stay
wide-awake for 6-8 hours and even up to 12 hours but then fatigue sets
in. The eye moves up to 20 time per second. Each of these eye movements
sends excitatory signals to update the brain's view of the world. The
eyelid controls the access to visual data to the brain. MENTAL ILLNESS The mentally ill are not qualitatively different from the rest of us. Psychosis and mental illness are all functional and organic. Healthy people also find it advantageous to turn off thoughts from feelings. We can flatten our affect if it gets in our way or becomes unbearable. Being always conscious is a balancing act. In 1955, with the discovery of Thorazine, we were able to empty all our mental hospitals. With new drugs like Prozac we were able to close most mental hospitals. ALCOHOL EFFECT ON THE BRAIN Alcohol
turns down the anxiety machine by depressing the frontal cortex (as
in sleep). It causes muscles to relax, emotions to run free, and loosens
our tongues. The sub cortical engines are no longer blocked by our pickled
frontal lobes. AGING AND STRESS You
are responsible for your own old age. After the age of 70 we can retrieve
information about 70% slower and our short-term memory is also slowed
down. There is decreased blood flow noticeable after age 55. There is
no loss of cognition unless we have diabetes or hardening of the arteries. NUTRITION AND THE BRAIN Our
brains have been growing for over 2 million years. The brain is changed
by the foods we had then. The enzymes in the fruits, vegetables, and
wild plants we ate set up communication systems. Our diet has changed
radically especially in the last 50 years. The brain wants the nutrients
it had for the last 50,000 years and we feed the brain cells things
that the brain never had 50 years ago. CONCLUSION In
the last 30 years we have found the brain to be a growing changing organ.
It is a living organ that is either improving or deteriorating. What
we eat, how we exercise and what drugs we take, all effect this growing
organ we call the brain. ACUPUNCTURE Acupuncture
can restore the healthy brain connections and enhance brain chemical
secretions that may be blocked by stress and abnormal neuronal activity.. |
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