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Risk factors for atherosclerosis
Oct 2nd, 2009 by btdaniel

Britt Talley Daniel MD

7777 Forest Lane, Suite B-220

Dallas, Texas  75230

(972) 566-4556

RISK  FACTORS  FOR  ATHEROSCLEROSIS

From the American Heart Association

1)  Genetics – your own family’s history of heart disease/stroke.

2)  Obesity.

3)  Cholesterol Level – less than 200 in general; also LDL cholesterol, homocysteine, fibrinogen, low-density lipoprotein, and C reactive protein.

4)  Hypertension-a blood pressure over 130 systolic or 90 diastolic.

5)  Smoking.

6)  Diabetes.

7)  Level of Activity – all persons should do 20 minutes of Aerobic Exercise three times a week.  Aerobic exercise is defined by the heart rate.  There are published tables for desired heart rates for different ages of life.  If you do an activity that gets your heart rate in the target area, then that is aerobic exercise.  Common  types of aerobic exercise are jogging, Jane Fonda type exercises, a rowing machine, treadmill, stepper, cardioglide machine, cross country skier machine.  Walking, playing golf or tennis, even racquetball are not aerobic exercise, because the heart rate doesn’t get high enough.

Athero (fat), sclerosis (hardening) means hardening of the arteries and is a generalized disease process affecting all the major arteries in the body, mainly the heart and arteries to the brain.  Atherosclerosis is a complex, multifactorial disease process with genetic and environmental factors. In the United States the number one cause of death over age 50 is heart disease from atherosclerosis.  The number three cause of death is stroke, again from atherosclerosis.  There are no “chemical roto-rooters” to open up arteries.  Surgeons and cardiologists may do this in selected cases if the disease process is focally present in one area, like the carotid artery going to the brain, or a coronary artery supplying the heart.  The idea is to try to live a type of life that reduces the risk factors of atherosclerosis–quit smoking, lose weight, treat hypertension, care for your diabetes, watch your cholesterol, and exercise aerobically.

A research report studying 40,000 patients for 40 years showed that persons who exercised lived two years longer than persons who did not.  This was at Framingham, Massachusetts, the oldest heart disease study group in America.

Exercise may be considered to be like a drug.  It promotes the relaxing response, helps reduce tension, and increases endorphins which are internal brain chemicals that decrease pain.  Exercise may help migraine, tension type headache, anxiety, panic disorder, insomnia, and depression.

BTD 10/2/09.

Tips for Sleeping Well
Oct 2nd, 2009 by btdaniel

Britt Talley Daniel MD

7777 Forest Lane

(972) 566-4556

Dallas, Texas 75230

Tips for Sleeping Well

Items 1 through 4 are called normal sleep hygiene and should be done by everyone.

1. Establish a daily sleep/wake schedule.  This means keeping a consistent time each day for waking up the morning and going to bed each night.  Try to stay within 30-60 minutes of these times every day.  This includes through the weekend, holidays, and vacations.  In general allow AT LEAST 7 -8 hours of sleep each night.  As we age, we need less sleep, so someone in his eighties may need only 6 1/2 hours, while teenagers may well need 9-10 hours.

2. Be careful with naps.  It’s okay in general to take a short nap after lunch, a siesta, but avoid a long nap.  If you can’t do this on your own, then set an alarm for a brief 15-30 minute nap.  If you have trouble falling asleep at night when you have napped earlier during the day, then eliminate the nap.  Just lie down and rest for 10-15 minutes instead during the day.  If you are the type who “never learned to rest” then, LEARN.  The relaxing response can be taught at any age.

3. Be careful with caffeine and pseudoephedrine, both of which promote alertness.  Caffeine lasts 8 hours.  If you go to sleep at night at 11 pm, then don’t drink any caffeine any later than 3 pm.  Pseudoephedrine is in a lot of over the counter sinus or cold medicines-such as Sudafed, Claritin D, or Tylenol Sinus.

4. Regular physical exercise promotes sleeping well.  The American Heart Association recommends that every body exercise aerobically for 20 minutes 3 times a week to decrease the risk of atherosclerosis.  As a physician I rarely see patients who do manual labor-carpenters, maids-who have trouble sleeping.  Exercise promotes the relaxing response.  A warning here is that some persons get too jived up after exercise to go to sleep.  They should exercise earlier during the day.  Exercise also induces endorphins, brain neurochemicals that reduce pain and promote calming.

5. A low volume of  a high calorie carbohydrate just before bedtime promotes sleep.  I’m talking about something like the proverbial “warm glass of milk.”  This has been studied scientifically and shown to work.  You have to be careful here with the calories and cholesterol.

6. It’s okay to get out of bed and go to another room for awhile, if you can’t fall asleep when you first try.  Then you may read , preferably something not too interesting , technical, or work related, for 10-15 minutes.  However, watching TV or doing housework are not good options.  They’re too stimulating.

7. Home remedies, vitamins, food supplements, and over the counter sleeping pills don’t usually work for long term sleeping problems.  Therefore avoid them.  This includes Benadryl which is in Tylenol PM, other antihistamines, and Chloral Hydrate.  Melatonin is a drug that may rarely work for small subset of patients with insomnia.  Unfortunately, it doesn’t work for everyone.  A dose of 3-12 mg of melatonin may be tried.

8. Ambien is a class 4 narcotic, hypnotic sleeping pill with abuse potential that has been approved for chronic use.  Some patients are drowsy after using it and may be up at night and perform automatic funtctions, like raiding the refrigerator.  Other hypnotics are Restoril and Dalmane.  Rozerem is a non narcotic drug that works on the melatonin brain stem system.

9. Alcohol  and minor tranquilizers (the Benzodiazepine drugs-Valium, Xanax, Ativan)-don’t work that well either because they don’t last all night and are not good long term options.

10. The majority of patients who have chronic sleeping problems also have psychological reactions or conditions that interfere with sleep.  Work directed toward resolving conflicts (psychotherapy, cognitive behavioral therapy) may be helpful.  Sleep lab information states that half of patients in America with insomnia are anxious and a quarter of them are depressed.  These are the most common causes of trouble sleeping.

11. The older antidepressant medications are, in general, safe for chronic sleep disorders.  Examples here would be: Elavil  (amitriptyline), Desyrel (trazodone), Tofranil, or Pamelor.  All of these drugs have a sedating quality which will allow normal physiological sleep.  They are not addictive or habituating.  They commonly have mild side effects of a dry mouth which improves with therapy.  These are the drugs that may be used for long term sleep disorders.  Trazodone comes as a 50 mg tablet and this works well for the majority of patients with trouble sleeping.  However, if this dose is too high the patient should break it in half and take 25 mg.  A maximum of 150 mg/night may be used.  If the patient doesn’t sleep all night on 50 mg then he should increase the dose by 25 mg /night per week until he sleeps all night.  The same approach may be used with amitriptyline where the dose may be started at 10 mg and can be just adjusted upward by 10 mg/night to about 50 mg until the patient sleeps all night.

12. Sleeping is an important issue with migraine because too much or too little sleep may make it worse.  These sleep tips will help treat migraine in a sense.

BTD 10/30/09

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