YOGA OFFERS STRIKING BENEFITS
FOR ALZHEIMER’S CAREGIVERS, STUDY
http://psychcentral.com
- When caregivers of people with Alzheimer’s use yoga to
engage in very brief, easy daily meditations, they lower levels of
depression, improve cognitive functioning and reduce stress-induced
cellular aging, says a new UCLA study. Currently, at least five million
Americans care for someone with dementia. Over the next two decades, the
frequency of dementia and the number of family caregivers who provide
support to these loved ones will increase dramatically. The extreme
burden on caregivers can be severe. “We know that chronic stress places
caregivers at a higher risk for developing depression. On average, the
incidence and prevalence of clinical depression in family dementia
caregivers approaches 50 percent.
Caregivers
are also twice as likely to report high levels of emotional distress,”
said Dr. Helen Lavretsky, professor of psychiatry at the UCLA Semel
Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior. Furthermore, many
caregivers tend to be older themselves, leading to what Lavretsky calls
an ‘impaired resilience’ to stress and a greater risk of cardiovascular
disease and mortality.
“Although
the relation between mental and physical health has been previously
documented, the mechanistic links are beginning to be understood at the
cellular level,” said Lavretsky. For the study, researchers recruited 49
caregivers who were taking care of a relative with dementia. The
volunteers were randomly placed in one of two groups. The meditation
group engaged in a brief, 12-minute yogic chanting meditation called
Kirtan Kriya. This was performed every day at the same time for 8
weeks. The other group relaxed in a quiet place by closing their eyes
and listening to instrumental music on a relaxation CD, also for 12
minutes every day at the same time for eight weeks. At the end of the 8
weeks, the meditation group had significantly lower levels of depressive
symptoms and greater improvement in mental health and cognitive
functioning, compared with the relaxation group. The pilot results were
“striking,” said Lavretsky, given that improvements were witnessed in
mental health, cognition, and telomerase activity over eight short weeks
in only 12 minutes a day. “We found that the effects on cognitive and
mental functioning and telomerase activity were specific to the Kirtan
Kriya,” she said.
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A
new study at UCLA involving family caregivers and late-life depression
revealed that yoga meditation helped reduce the symptoms of depression
while showing improvement in overall mental health of participants.
“Because Kirtan Kriya had several elements of using chanting (kirtan),
mudras (finger poses) and visualization, there was a ‘brain fitness’
effect in addition to stress-reduction that contributed to the overall
effect of the meditation,” said Dr. Lavretsky. The combination of kirtan
along with mudras increases blood flow to the motor-sensory area of the
brain.
WHAT DO THE VEDIC TEACHINGS TELL US?
Meditation
is the art and technique of experiencing divine power within. In Hindu
theology, meditation is closely associated with God; thus was born the
sacred Hinduism. ... The art and science of Raja Yoga, or meditation
yoga, is closely associated with the awakening of the chakras in tune
with various breathing exercises (pranayamas). There have been many
different techniques, such as Kundalini Yoga, Kriya Yoga, Siddha Yoga,
Nirvana-Sahasrara, and Sudarshan Yoga, with some variations.
In
many religious centers, the meditation aspects of yoga are more
emphasized. Kriya Yoga, Kundalini Chakra, Siddha Yoga, and a few more
are essentially variants of the meditation Raja Yoga. With these types,
the physical aspect of Hatha yoga may be less conspicuous. The
combination of the secular and the spiritual is met with in many other
places. Even though Yoga is a child of Hinduism, it has now grown its
own strong wings. It has made its mark, beyond the confines of any one
religion. Yoga has truly become a citizen of the world!
Dr. Hiro Badlani:
“Hinduism - Path of the Ancient Wisdom”
Chapter 44 - “Meditation: The Spiritual Practice”
Chapter 45 - “Yoga: Union with the Divine”
http://hinduismpath.com/
3 comments:
Meditation keeps your mind stress free and it contributes a lot to live a peaceful life.
Buddhism and yoga teaches that meditation and yoga poses, are the pathway to health and deeper awareness of self. It’s more than just the candles or the breathing. It is a belief and a religion.
Meditation is a blend of physical postures (asanas) and breathing techniques (pranayama).
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