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Saturday 3 October 2015

3 Effective Yoga Asanas To Relieve Lupus Symptoms



What Is Lupus?

Lupus is an inflammatory disorder that usually reduces the efficiency of the immune system while attacking healthy tissues and organs. Lupus’ inflammation can severely damage the body. It usually affects skin, kidneys, heart, lungs, brain and the joints. Yoga is an effective home remedy for lupus, and it helps people relieve chronic pain.

Symptoms:

The symptoms of lupus are quite diverse. It is often confused with other disorders. The most conclusive symptom of lupus is the presence of a butterfly-shaped rash on your cheeks.

Other symptoms usually associated with lupus include:
  • Fatigue
  • Fever
  • Memory loss
  • Confusion
  • Swelling
  • Stiffness
  • Chest Pain
  • Headache
  • Dry/Irritable eyes
  • Enlarged lymph nodes
  • Joint pain

Causes:

Lupus is a condition that has no known causes, although experts widely believe that lupus is the result of genetics and environment. The onset of lupus can also be triggered by drugs, infections, and even sunlight.

Now, let’s look at some effective yoga poses for treating lupus.


Viparita Karani:

This is a great pose for improving blood circulation and people with lupus problems usually perform this pose quite often.

How To Perform The Viparita Karani:

  1. Lie on the floor on your back, with your hands below your hips (your palms should be touching your hips).
  2. Now bending your elbows and taking their support, raise your body and lift your legs.
  3. Balance your body on your arms, and slowly raise your legs and your body. Support your back with your hands, and your body with your elbows.
  4. Consider adding cushions under your neck, a blanket under the back and another one under your heels.
  5. Hold this pose for around 5-10 minutes.
Viparita Karani

Benefits:

Apart from relieving the symptoms of Lupus, Viparita Karani has other benefits like:
  • Blood flow regulation
  • Alleviating menstrual cramps
  • Relieves swollen ankles
  • Improves digestive processes
  • Calms anxiety
  • Re-energizes your body
  • Helps overcome insomnia and depression

Mountain Pose (Tadasana):

This is one of the most popular yoga poses to exist. The mountain pose or the Tadasana has many benefits, and it is quite helpful in relieving inflammation and pain caused by lupus.

How To Perform The Mountain Pose:

  1. Begin by standing straight and joining your legs.
  2. Keep your heel slightly apart.
  3. Keep your sole grounded.
  4. The hands should remain at the body’s side.
  5. Now fix your gaze forward and remain in this pose for 3-5 minutes.
  6. Rest and repeat.
Tadasana

Benefits:

Along with alleviating pain and inflammation caused by lupus, Tadasana has many other benefits, which include:
  • Improving posture
  • Strengthening lower body
  • Helping increase awareness
  • Regulating breathing
  • Relieving sciatica

Camel Pose (Ustrasana):

Camel Pose or the Ustrasana is a great remedial exercise for lupus. Camel pose helps relieve congestion, and also helps people overcome rheumatic pain.

How To Perform The Camel Pose:

  1. Kneel down on a yoga mat or the floor.
  2. Let your hands rest by the body’s side.
  3. Begin bending back until you feel a stretch in your back.
  4. Try and hold onto your heels using your hands.
  5. Continue holding this pose for 10-15 seconds before you let go.
  6. Rest and repeat.

Ustrasana

Benefits:

The camel pose has many benefits beyond simply helping you overcome lupus pain. The other benefits of the pose include:
  • Relieves knee pain
  • Stimulates thyroid gland
  • Helps increase lung capacity
  • Stimulates metabolic activity
  • Improves respiratory health
  • Enhances blood circulation
  • Helps improve posture

So, practice these straightforward and simple asanas and get relief from Lupus and its associated symptoms today. Did you find this information helpful?

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Five Easy Yoga Inspired Exercises To Strengthen Your Joint

As we get older, we lose bone. But strengthening exercises can help slow that process and help prevent osteoporosis. Strengthening exercises are also helpful for joints.


"The best protection for a joint is having strong muscles around that joint," says physical therapist Alice Bell, vice president of clinical services at Genesis Rehabilitation Services in Kennett Square, Pa.

Being active is one of the best ways you can keep your bones and joints working well. Exercise can help you:
  • Maintain bone density as you get older
  • Lessen joint pain
  • Keep off extra weight that can stress your joints
  • Help your balance so you avoid falls that can damage bones and joints
Below is the five easy yoga inspired exercises which can strengthen your joint and protect it from injury

Rocking Boat Pose

Inspired by Boat Pose (Navasana) this exercise strengthens the deep abdominal muscles and hip flexors, obliques and psoas, while massaging the lower back.

From a seated position, engage your core to lift your legs and bend your knees, reaching your arms long by either side. From here, slowly roll down to your lower back as your legs extend forward and long, and your arms extend out to the sides.

Exhale and slowly roll back up to Boat Pose. Repeat 10 times, then rest and repeat.



TIP: Be sure that you are curling your back down bone by bone, to avoid overusing the superficial hip flexors and lower back. You should really feel this in your stomach muscles.


Abdominal Criss Cross

This abdominal work targets the diagonal slings of the obliques, promoting torso stability and improved spinal flexibility.

Lie down on your back, placing your hands behind your head, curling your chest off the floor. Bring your knees to a tabletop position. Exhale, extending the left leg forward and simultaneously twisting your torso to the right, toward the bent knee.

Inhale and transition through center, then exhale and twist to the other side. Repeat this back and forth motion 10 times (5x on each side), then rest and repeat.



TIP: Keep elbows wide, the pelvis glued to the ground and visualize you are moving through molasses. Control is key.


Superman Lifts

This move strengthens the back body (trapezius, spinal extensors, glutes and upper hamstrings) to improve posterior torso stability from head to hips.

Lie on your stomach, with your legs long and slightly wider than your hips, and arms above your head, slightly wider than your shoulders. Keeping the abdominals drawn in and the neck long, lift the arms, legs and chest off the floor.

From here, exhale and slowly lift the arms and legs a few inches higher, then inhale and lower them down a few inches. Repeat 15 times, then rest and repeat.



TIP: Keep the knees and elbows straight, and focus on reaching out as you lift. Keep the eyes on the floor during the exercise; if you feel discomfort in the neck, drop the chin, widen the arms and draw your shoulders away from your ears.


Cat Pose Hover

This variation of Cat Pose (Marjaryasana) targets the shoulder girdle, abdominal and quadriceps, promoting stability in the upper back and knees while stretching the lower back.

From hands and knees, curl the spine into a cat-back position, drop the head, pull down the shoulders and squeeze the glutes. From here, lift the knees off the floor no more than two inches and hover there for 5-8 deep breaths, pulling the abdominal in deeper with each exhale. Rest, then repeat for two more rounds.



TIP: Sensitive wrists? Make fists and balance on the knuckles. Sensitive knees? Keep the knees on the ground and focus on the abdominal. Keep the spine curled while you hover (the spine will want to straighten to reduce the intensity, but don’t let it!), and visualize you are pulling up your quads like stockings.


Forearm Plank With Single Leg Lifts

This exercise strengthens the shoulders, back, abdominal and hips. The primary muscle targeted is the serratus anterior, critical for stability in all your planks and arm balances.

Come into a forearm plank position, with your legs together and stomach lifted. Inhale and drop the chest toward the floor, feeling the shoulder blades disconnecting from your back.

Exhale and press your chest up toward the ceiling, widening the upper back like the spread wings of a hawk, and simultaneously lift one leg off the floor.
Inhale and lower both legs and your chest, then exhale and repeat, this time lifting the opposite leg. Continue this motion 10 times (5 x alternating legs), then rest and repeat.



TIP: This takes coordination, so if you’re feeling confounded by all the moving parts, keep both feet on the floor and focus on the shoulder girdle movement. Keep the abdominal in and up throughout exercise so you don’t collapse in the lower back.

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