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Believing Is Seeing
Excerpt
By
Colette Bouchez, HealthScoutNews
(HealthScoutNews) -- What
you see may not always be what you get.
But what you think you see just might get you what you
want, particularly if what you want is a healthier, less stressful
life.
That's the tenet behind the practice of guided imagery, a rapidly
growing form of meditative relaxation therapy that uses the power
of the mind to help the body deal with physical changes linked
to stress.
The goal of the therapy, experts say, is to use all the senses
-- including touch, smell, sight and sound -- to prompt the body
into a deep sense of peace and tranquility. Doing so helps reduce
or eliminate at least some troubling physical symptoms associated
with stress.
"Stress can cause a wide range of health problems that can
reach from head to toe, including migraines, an upset stomach,
back aches, general aches and pains, fatigue. There isn't a part
of the body that can't be affected by stress," says Dr. Shari
Lusskin, associate clinical professor of psychiatry at New York
University Medical Center.
Anything that can help the mind relax, Lusskin adds, will reduce
levels of stress and that, in turn, will help the body feel better.
For those whose illnesses -- high blood pressure or angina,
for example -- are affected even more by stress, guided imagery
can be even more beneficial, Lusskin says.
The basis of guided imagery is deep relaxation. When the mind
is relaxed, say experts, we are more accepting of calming images
and thoughts. And it is those visuals that can affect physiologic
responses within the body.
"The patient is asked to imagine a peaceful scene, a place
that is comforting and consoling to them, a kind of oasis where
they can imagine themselves free of problems, particularly health
problems such as pain," says Dr. Mehmet Oz, director of the
Cardiovascular Institute at Columbia Presbyterian Medical Center
in New York City, and one of a growing number of physicians who
believe guided imagery has positive health benefits.
When the mind "digests" these peaceful images, the
effects are felt in the body. And therein lies the therapy's restorative
properties, Oz says.
But is feeling better tantamount to getting better?
And are any tangible health benefits to be gained from guided
imagery?
It all depends on how you view the objective scientific results.
In at least one study conducted by Oz and a team of heart surgeons,
patients awaiting a heart transplant underwent guided imagery
classes for six weeks and were then tested against another group
that had done no relaxation therapy.
At the study's conclusion, those patients who had performed the
imagery exercises reported feeling better -- they could breathe
easier, were less fatigued and believed they could do more, says
Oz. However, objective tests designed to measure real improvement
in body function, such as the ability to walk faster or farther,
failed to prove they actually were any better.
Although some may see the result as failure for the technique,
Oz takes the half-full glass approach to the finding.
"If you're dying of heart failure, is it more important
that you walk faster or that you feel better? I say both are important.
But if you can only get one of the two, and guided imagery can
help you accomplish that, then in my book, it's worth doing,"
he says.
Lusskin agrees. "When the mind is relaxed, the body always
feels better, no matter what the ailment or problem. And if guided
imagery can help a patient feel better while they are ill, then
that's a big plus," she says.
In fact, that's what doctors are finding. Researchers at Ohio
State University, for example, reported that cancer patients using
guided imagery while undergoing chemotherapy felt better overall
about their treatments and were better able to cope with side
effects.
At Michigan State University, students taught guided imagery
were able to actually improve the function of immune cells called
neutrophils, which are important in the body's defense against
certain bacterial infections and funguses.
Many hospitals around the nation are now instituting guided imagery
programs as part of routine patient care. At Marin General Hospital,
in Greenbrae, Calif., for example, free guided imagery sessions
up to 50 minutes in length are routinely offered to patients in
the hospital, while an outpatient program is offered to community
residents.
Because the principles of guided imagery are fairly simple to
understand and use, there are an abundance of self-help vehicles
to get you started, including tapes, CDs and books.
However, most experts say that if the problems you want to tackle
are significant -- either from a physical or emotional standpoint
-- it's probably a good idea to have at least a few sessions with
a therapist who specializes in guided imagery before you embark
on your own.
What To Do
For an overview of guided imagery, including how and when it
can help -- and when it can't -- as well as advice on choosing
a therapist, visit the
Yahoo health center.
To learn more about how to use guided imagery in your life, and
to try out a program for free, click
here.
Reference
Source 101
For more information on how to prevent other diseases, use
PreventDisease.com's "Quick
Prevention Resources".
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