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HEALTHY CELL CONCEPT:  PART FOUR

CELL EXERCISE:

             Cell exercise is the fourth aspect of the Healthy Cell Concept

       We all know that exercise is important to our health.  I have already shown how exercise is absolutely necessary  in order for our lymphatic system to function in its role of removing toxins from the trillions of cells that make up our body.  Exercise increases muscle strength so that we can work and play for longer periods of time without fatigue.  Many look upon exercise as a means of burning extra calories in order to better manage their weight.  It is in this area of weight management that I will frame our discussion of exercise as it is here where people often misunderstand the relationship between exercise and health.

       Is exercise the pathway to weight loss?  The average pound of stored fat in the body is equal to 3,600 calories of stored energy.  Running an eight minute mile will burn up approximately 100 calories.  Dancing for twenty minutes, bicycling two and one-half miles in nine minutes or walking one mile in twenty minutes will do the same.  To put it another way, you would have to run thirty six miles at eight minutes a mile to lose one pound of stored fat.  You can readily see that exercise, in and of itself, is not a quick pathway to weight loss.

       Am  I suggesting that exercise is not an important factor in weight management?  Not at all!  What I am saying is that the role of exercise, as it relates to weight management, is more complex and needs to be understood in relation to how the body uses energy. 

       The cells of our body contain little energy producing factories called mitochondria.  These mitochondria are lung like organelles that mix oxygen with nutrients to provide the energy we need for human activity.   At moderate rates of activity, a sufficient amount of energy can be generated from the utilization of the blood sugar glucose and the oxygen we breathe in, so that an individual is constantly working in what can be referred to as their aerobic training zone. Your aerobic training zone is the level at which you can work and play without the accumulation of lactic acid in the muscles.  Lactic acid accumulation is what gives you that burning sensation in the muscles that results in muscle fatigue.

       Lactic acid buildup is what normally occurs in the muscles as a result of there not being enough oxygen supplied to the mitochondria of muscle cells.  Therefore, the most important reason for exercise is to increase the oxygen utilization capacity of the body and therefore reduce the rate at which lactic acid accumulates.

       How does exercise increase the oxygen utilization capacity of the body?  Aerobic exercise, (exercise that allows for the uptake of more oxygen than when resting), will multiply the number of mitochondria in the cells one to two times over that of an unfit person.  The size of the mitochondria can increase up to 40% and the enzymes that are involved in energy production can be increased anywhere from ten to one-hundred percent.

       Aerobic exercise provides for a greater oxygen supply to the tissues of the body and therefore allows for a more efficient burning of fuel.  This results in a more complete breakdown of sugars and fats.  Better fuel efficiency will result in more energy and less fatigue.  This is a primary purpose for maintaining a consistent exercise program.

      While exercise will not burn a lot of fat calories during the time you are exercising, such exercise will raise your basic metabolic rate and keep it elevated for hours after you have finished exercising.  This results in an increase in the rate at which calories are burned over a period of hours, even after you have discontinued your exercise.  This can help to reduce weight through more efficient metabolism.  For example, walking one hour per day with no increase in daily calorie intake could result in the loss of thirty pounds in one year.

       Exercise will increase the rate at which fat is burned while at the same time increasing the synthesis of protein and therefore limit the loss of muscle mass while on a low calorie diet to lose weight.  Exercise will also increase the burning of brown fat, which is felt to be a primary factor in weight management.  Brown fat is a metabolically active fat that is found close to the skeleton and is responsible for the production of body heat. Overweight individuals are often found to poorly utilize brown fat.

       Additional benefits of regular aerobic exercise include a decrease in the resting pulse rate and blood pressure, an increase in hemoglobin and therefore better oxygen carrying capacity of the blood, increase in HDL cholesterol, (good guys), and a decrease in LDL cholesterol, (bad guys), and an increase in the number of capillaries carrying blood throughout the body.  Typical forms of aerobic exercise include walking, running, rebounding, swimming, biking and any other exercise that raises the heart rate above resting levels for an extended period of time.

       One method of determining your aerobic training zone is to subtract your age from 180 which will give you the maximum number of heart beats per minute that is allowable for the average “unfit” person of a particular age.  An ideal aerobic exercise program would require maintaining at least 70% of your maximum allowable heart rate for 20 minutes, three or four times per week.  As your fitness level increases, your allowable maximum heart rate can be refigured on the basis of 220 minus your age.

       While aerobic exercise is best for overall physical fitness, doing resistive type exercise will do a lot to strengthen muscle and connective tissue such as tendons and ligaments.  Such resistive exercise can include everything from push-ups, chin-ups and working out with free weights or weight machines. Use of  stretching equipment, such as Xertubes, is a great way to increase strength and flexibility. 

       Both aerobic and resistive exercise will enhance bone strength by facilitating calcium utilization.  Exercise has also been shown to increase T lymphocyte activity in the body and therefore enhance immune response.  Much research  has demonstrated the relationship between exercise and stress reduction.  Exercise has been shown to affect neurological function  by stimulating the production of certain brain chemicals such as endorphins which elevate mood.  

       In summery, exercise is vital to the health and well being of both body and mind.  Our bodies were designed to be active. Even short periods of inactivity result in atrophy of muscle tissue.  Strength of both body and brain tissue is directly related to consistent exercise.  It is the blood that carries nutrients to all parts of the body.  Exercise is an important dynamic in facilitating good blood flow throughout the vascular system.  Good blood flow results in a better nutrient feed to the various tissue systems of the body. 

      In addition to bodily exercise, the mind should also be exercised  through reading and various projects that require creative thinking and application of thought.  Research has demonstrated that maintaining an active (exercised) mind is a vital dynamic in preventing the onset of alzheimers disease and other forms of dementia. Do some reading everyday.  Work cross-word puzzles.  Play chess and card games. Keeping the mind exercised will pay off in huge dividends, especially as you grow older.
                                  
MENTAL HEALTH:

  Mental health: the fifth component of the Healthy Cell Concept

       Much research has been done as to the connection between mind and body.  It is now realized that our nutritional status has a lot to do with our moods, thinking ability and general capacity to function mentally.  By simply adjusting the diet, you can virtually change behavior.  This has been shown in research with Attention Deficient Disorder, (ADD), where removing processed and refined foods from the diet resulted in a marked improvement in behavior.

       Research has been done in prisons with criminals where dietary adjustments have brought about a reduction in aggressive/compulsive behavior.  The use of herbal preparations such as gingko biloba have improved short term memory.   St.-John’s Wort, Sam-e, 5HTP Tryptophan and phosphatidylserine have been effective in altering brain chemistry to improve mood. Acetyl-L carnitine (ACL) has been shown to boost memory and concentration.

       While the nutritional status of the body has a definite relationship to how the mind works, the workings of the mind has great impact on how the body functions.  Mental stress will have great influence on how the glandular system responds.  The adrenal glands in particular respond to what goes on in our thinking.  The immune system is very sensitive to stress levels and will have a much more difficult time dealing with pathogens if mental stress levels are high and if the mind is in a state of anger, frustration and negative thought.

       Since it is impossible to avoid stress and mental negatives, it is important to maintain sound nutrition which will go a long way toward facilitating a good mental attitude and the ability to better handle stress.  Regular exercise is a known stress reducer in addition to its role in increasing nutrient and oxygen supply to all parts of the body, including the brain.  Body massage and related procedures are excellent ways to relieve stress and also promote a healing response in the body relative to various health problems.  

       Striving to focus on the positive things in life and minimizing the negative is highly conducive to a healthy mental attitude.  While this is easier said than done, it really does pay off in a healthier life style and can often lead to a healing response in the body.

       The classic example of this is the story of Norman Cousins as recounted in his book,  Anatomy of an Illness.  Mr. Cousins suffered from a painful connective tissue disease where medical doctors had given him a one in five hundred chance of recovery.  Since nothing much could be done medically to deal with the situation, Mr. Cousins decided to try laughter therapy.  Brought into his hospital room were a number of funny films which Mr Cousins would watch.  The discovery was made that with just ten minutes of genuine belly laughter, he would experience at least two hours of pain-free sleep.  As pain would return, Mr Cousins would watch more funny movies and, more often than not, he would again experience relief from pain.       

      Seeing the kind of result that was obtained  in reducing pain through laughter therapy, the next step was to determine if there was a measurable effect on the body’s immune activity.  Sedimentation rate readings, (sedimentation rate is a blood test to determine white cell activity), were done just before and several hours after the laughter episodes.  Each time this was done, there was a drop in the sedimentation reading, indicating less struggle by the immune system to deal with the disease.  To make a long story short, Mr. Cousins eventually recovered, using laughter therapy along with high vitamin C intake.

       A number of years ago, researcher Candice Pert, of the National Institutes of Health, conducted research where  participants had electrode stimulation done to the brain in order to stimulate the remembrance of past events.  The research showed that when positive, uplifting events were remembered, it produced a very positive effect on the  immune and hormonal systems of the body.  When negative and traumatic events were remembered, the immune system became depressed, and the hormonal system was negatively impacted.

       As can be seen, what goes on in our mind has a powerful effect on what goes on in our bodies.  It is therefore very important to consider mental health as a vital component of the healthy cell concept.

CONCLUSION:

       We have considered five basic areas of what it takes to be healthy.  While these areas are not exhaustive, they, nevertheless, do represent the major areas of importance in putting together a program to facilitate health and avoid disease.  It has been said that the absence of disease does not necessarily equate with the presence of wellness. This statement is true in so much that true wellness is much more than avoiding disease.  True wellness has to do with  sustained energy levels, mental sharpness, muscular strength and endurance, and experiencing a general sense of vitality and well-being. 

       True wellness also involves something called organ reserve.  Organ reserve involves the creation of a level of health and vitality that allows for the bodies various organ systems to be strong enough to not only meet the demands of day to day living, but also be able to respond in a positive way to extraordinary challenges that confront us from time to time.  By implementing the healthy cell concept, you will greatly increase your chances of experiencing this kind of organ reserve and you will place yourself in a position to meet the demands of life.

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