Chant
'Om' for Better Heart Health
Meditation may do more than bring you inner
peace; a new study claims it may improve your
cardiovascular health by decreasing the risk
of metabolic syndrome.
In a study reported in the June 12 issue of
the Archives of Internal Medicine, researchers
report that the practice of transcendental
meditation can significantly decrease insulin
resistance, lower blood pressure and decrease
heart rate variability.
"It's possible to use the mind-body connection
to tap into the body's own inner intelligence
to bring about changes in physiology to reverse
the risk of diabetes and heart disease," said
Dr. Robert Schneider, director of the Institute
for Natural Medicine and Prevention at the
Maharishi University of Management in Maharishi
Vedic City, Iowa. Schneider is also a co-author
of the book Total Heart Health.
Of the reduction in insulin resistance, Schneider
noted, "a reduction like this would make
a drug company a lot of money. The only other
things that could bring about such a reduction
are intensive exercise or a large weight loss."
Insulin resistance is one of the key players
in metabolic syndrome, a group of cardiovascular
risk factors that occur simultaneously, thus
increasing the risk of heart disease. When
the body doesn't properly use insulin, excess
glucose remains in the blood, which affects
many of the body's functions. Excess glucose
causes a rise in triglycerides and other blood
fats. It also impairs kidney function, which
can lead to high blood pressure.
In collaboration with researchers from the
University of Southern California Keck School
of Medicine and Cedars-Sinai Medical Center,
Schneider and his colleagues recruited 103
people who had already been diagnosed with
heart disease to study the effects of transcendental
meditation on heart disease risk factors. Eighty-four
of these recruits completed the 16 weeks of
the study.
The average age of the study participants
was about 67, and slightly more than 40 percent
were male. The average body mass index was
28, which means the average study volunteer
was overweight, but not obese. About one-third
had a history of high blood pressure, and 9
percent had diabetes.
The study participants were randomized into
one of two groups for the study. One group
received training in and practiced transcendental
meditation twice a day for 20 minutes at a
time for four months, while the other group
received health education about heart disease.
Schneider explained that transcendental meditation
involves sitting quietly while your mind settles
into a quieter and quieter state until you're
not thinking at all, literally "transcending
the thinking process," he said.
The researchers found that systolic blood
pressure -- that's the top number -- dropped
by more than 3 points in the meditation group
and went up more than 2 points in the health
education group during the study period.
Meditation also had positive effects on heart
rate variability, another measure of heart
health. A decrease in heart rate variability
is a negative sign, and those in the health
education group had a decrease in heart rate
variability during the study period, while
those in the meditation group saw a slight
increase in heart rate variability.
The most significant change, according to
Schneider, was seen in insulin resistance.
In a measurement that compares fasting blood
glucose and insulin levels, the health education
group went up 0.52 while the meditation group
went down by 0.75 -- a "significant" change,
according to the authors.
"This is important. It's not earthshaking
news, but [these researchers] have extended
the information on transcendental meditation
to include insulin resistance and metabolic
syndrome," said Dr. Louis Teichholz, medical
director of cardiology and complementary medicine
at Hackensack University Medical Center.
Teichholz said these benefits probably aren't
limited to transcendental meditation, but likely
include other forms of relaxation, such as
yoga, tai chi, guided imagery, biofeedback
and even exercise. Schneider, however, pointed
out that right now, transcendental meditation
is the only method that's been proven in randomized
clinical trials.
He said meditation and other forms of relaxation
have beneficial effects because they activate
the parasympathetic part of the autonomic nervous
system, which helps calm down the body's fight-or-flight
response, which is triggered by the body's
sympathetic nervous system. When the sympathetic
system is activated by stress, it causes the
body to release hormones, and those hormones
can help make the body resistant to insulin.
However, when the parasympathetic system is
activated, the body's cells become more responsive
to insulin, Teichholz explained.
"You can't always change the stress," he
said. "But it's not the stress that matters,
but how you respond to it. If you can respond
in a different way, you can negate some of
the negative effects of stress." |