September 1, 2011

Square-Stepping: The Fun Way to Get Fit and Improve Balance


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September 1, 2011 
Square-Stepping: The Fun Way to Get Fit and Improve Balance
No Plunger? No Problem. Secret to Unplugging Your Toilet
Is It Strep Throat? When to See the Doctor
New Treatment Reverses 82% of Deadly Cancers... Without Chemotherapy, Radiation or Surgery
Fascinating Facts
  The Best of Mainstream and Natural Medicine
Tamara Eberlein, Editor

Square-Stepping: The Fun Way to Get Fit and Improve Balance

Remember playing hopscotch as a kid? My friends and I had such a good time that we didn’t even realize we were exercising. Well, Japanese researchers recently developed a new form of the classic game, called square-stepping, which uses a grid of approximately 10-inch squares (four squares across and 10 squares long) marked on the floor. The goal is to step in and out of the squares in prescribed patterns of varying complexity. Though this research involved seniors specifically, it seems to me that younger folks also could reap the physical benefits—and the fun.

Researchers tested the activity with study participants ages 65 to 74. For 12 weeks, the seniors did either twice-weekly 70-minute sessions of square-stepping... twice-weekly 70-minute sessions of strength-and-balance training... or weekly supervised walking sessions, with instructions to increase the number of steps taken daily. Results: Square-steppers showed significantly more improvement than walkers in leg power, balance, agility and reaction time, and equal improvement in lower-body fitness as the strength-and-balance training group. Also, during the eight to 14 months of follow-up, square-steppers experienced significantly fewer falls than both the walkers and the strength-and-balance group.

According to exercise physiologist Irv Rubenstein, PhD, square-stepping is similar to "ladder drill" exercises used by athletes to improve agility, coordination, balance, speed and endurance. Bonuses: Square-stepping can easily be done at home, indoors or outdoors... is fun to do alone or with friends... and costs nothing.

Setting up a square-stepping grid at home is easiest if you already have a tiled floor made with approximately 10-to-12-inch square tiles, Dr. Rubenstein said... or you can create your own grid of 40 squares with masking tape or painter’s tape... or you can chalk or paint a grid on your driveway.

As with any new exercise regimen, get your doctor’s OK first. Then try the simple stepping patterns below two or three times per week, Dr. Rubenstein suggested, starting with 10 minutes per session and working your way up to 20 minutes as you become more fit. Video demo: Visit www.Square-Step.org/en/162.html.

To start each exercise, stand at one of the short ends of the grid so the 10-row length of the grid stretches out in front of you. When you complete a pattern and reach the end of the grid, turn around and come back, repeating the pattern. Helpful: For each row of four squares, think of the far-left square as A... the center-left square as B... the center-right square as C... and the far-right square as D.

Diagonal stepping: Skill level: Very easy. With your right foot, step forward into the first row of squares, placing right foot in the square to the right of the centerline (square C of row one)... then with your left foot, step forward into the second row of squares, placing left foot in the square to the left of the centerline (square B of row two, on a diagonal above the first square you stepped into). Continue stepping forward in this simple diagonal pattern (square C with the right foot, B with the left foot) until you reach the end of the grid.

In-and-out: Skill level: Fairly easy. With your right foot, step into square C of row one... with your left foot, step into square B of row one (so feet are next to each other). Next, move your right foot sideways to the right to step into square D of row one... move your left foot sideways to the left to step into square A of row one. Then step forward with the right foot into square C of row two... and repeat the pattern (square C with the right foot, B with the left foot, D with the right, A with the left) in all 10 rows to the end of the grid.

Switch-back: Skill level: Intermediate. With your right foot, step into square C of row one... with your left foot, step into square B of row two. Next, with your right foot, step forward into square C of row two... with your left foot, step backward into square B of row one. Then step forward with the right foot into square C of row three, then with the left foot into square B of row four, with the right into square C of row four, then with the left into square B of row three. Repeat the pattern to the end of the grid.

Step-it-up: Skill level: Advanced intermediate. With your right foot, step into square C of row one... with your left foot, step into square B of row one. Next, move your right foot sideways to the right to step into square D of row one... move your left foot forward to step into square B of row two. Then move your right foot diagonally forward to step into square C of row two... move your left foot sideways to the left to step into square A of row two. Repeat the pattern (square C with the right foot, B with the left, D with the right... then in the next row, B with the left, C with the right, A with the left) to the end of the grid.

As your skills improve: Move your feet more quickly... lift your knees higher... invent your own increasingly complex stepping patterns.

Source: Irv Rubenstein, PhD, is an exercise physiologist and president of STEPS (Scientific Training and Exercise Prescriptions Specialists), a Nashville-based personal fitness training center that also offers customized corporate wellness programs. www.StepsFitness.com


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No Plunger? No Problem. Secret to Unplugging Your Toilet

My toilet was stopped up. My guests were on their way. And I couldn’t find a plunger!

Lucky for me, I’d learned the secret: Just squirt some liquid dish detergent, wait 15 minutes, and my home and guests were good to go.

How often have you been caught in a situation like this—or any of thousands of other household mishaps? Spills, breaks, lost items—family heirlooms nearly ruined. Too often, right?

Joan and Lydia Wilen, better known to TV viewers as "The Wilen Sisters," have the secret to saving the day on these and thousands of other potentially disastrous mishaps.


Learn more...

Is It Strep Throat? When to See the Doctor


Q: How can I tell if I have strep throat? My sister (a nurse) says that as a middle-aged woman, I don’t need to run to the doctor every time my throat hurts.

A: Age does matter, so consider it first. Strep throat is common in kids, adolescents and young adults. But it is less likely to occur after a person’s mid-30s unless another family member has it, since it is quite contagious within a household.

Next, note your symptoms. See your doctor if: Your throat hurts so much that it’s tough to swallow anything, even saliva... you have a fever above 101°F. or feel like you have that level of fever (interestingly, people’s perceptions of being feverish can be more accurate than the thermometer in predicting strep)... and you do not have a cough or runny nose. Your doctor will check to see if you have white pus-filled patches on your tonsils and swollen, tender lymph nodes in the neck. These signs plus the symptoms above strongly suggest strep and the need for antibiotics.

Some physicians swab the throat to do a rapid strep test, which gives results in about 10 minutes. Limitations: This checks only for group A streptococcus infections (and misses about 25% of those), even though strep throat also can be caused by another bacterium, group C streptococcus. Some throat cultures do test for group C, but results take up to two days. Less commonly, a severe sore throat is caused by the bacterium fusobacterium necrophorum. So, even if your rapid strep test is negative for group A, you could have one of the other infections.

All three of the bacteria above can be treated with a seven-day course of the antibiotic penicillin or amoxicillin. The antibiotic reduces your risk for strep complications, such as peritonsillar abscess (a painful pus-filled sac on the tonsils) or rheumatic fever... and for a rare but potentially deadly complication of fusobacterium necrophorum called Lemierre’s syndrome. Antibiotic treatment also helps you feel better days sooner than you would if your strep went undiagnosed and untreated... and does everyone around you a favor by reducing the risk for contagion.

Source: Robert M. Centor, MD, is a professor of internal medicine at the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB) and associate dean of the UAB Huntsville Regional Medical Campus.


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New Treatment Reverses 82% of Deadly Cancers... Without Chemotherapy, Radiation or Surgery

Lung cancer? Everybody knows that’s usually a death sentence. TV’s Peter Jennings died just a few months after announcing he had it.

But you won’t hear that gloomy outlook from some very fortunate cancer patients. They were treated with a startling new medical cure that harnessed the cancer-killing power of their body’s T-cells.

These warriors of your immune system usually ignore cancer. But researchers recently found a way to trick T-cells into destroying deadly cancers. How? With a dose of the patient’s own tumor cells!


Read on...

Fascinating Facts

1 in 4... American adults who eat three or more servings of vegetables per day, as recommended by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Source: CDC

1 in 15... Homes in the US that have elevated radon levels. Warning: Radon causes about 21,000 lung cancer deaths per year in this country. Source: Environmental Protection Agency

1 in 500... Estimated number of Americans with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM), the genetic heart condition that can cause sudden death—typically among young people as they are playing sports. If HCM is detected and treated, patients can live long lives. Source: Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy Association


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Tamara Eberlein, the editor of HealthyWoman from Bottom Line, has been a health journalist for nearly three decades.
An award-winning author or coauthor of four books, she is committed to helping other women in midlife and beyond live healthy, fulfilling lives. Her latest book is the updated, third edition of When You’re Expecting Twins, Triplets, or Quads (HarperCollins). She is also the "chief health adviser" to her husband of 26 years and three college-age children.
  
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