“Winter health myths: Sorting fact from fiction - msnbc.com” |
Winter health myths: Sorting fact from fiction - msnbc.com Posted: 30 Dec 2010 08:17 AM PST Winter can be a pain. At its mildest, the chilly weather strains your lungs during your morning run. At its worst, it wields an icy grip on your arteries. "Cold air constricts your blood vessels," says John Elefteriades, M.D., chief of cardiac surgery at Yale Medical Group. "This helps keep your body warm—bloodflow just beneath the skin diminishes, so less heat escapes." But it also causes blood-pressure spikes, which can stress arteries and heart muscle. So it's no surprise that deaths from heart attack, heart disease, and stroke peak from December through March. 20 Little changes for a healthier life. But the subzero season's frosty reception isn't entirely weather-related — or deserved. These seven myths about the health perils of winter rank up there with the abominable snowman. So our experts will help you stop worrying about stuff that doesn't really matter so you can focus on things that do — all to keep you and yours healthy through the season. Now hit the slopes! Wicked winter health myth #1: Allergies hibernate in the cold How to eliminate germs and allergens. Start with that fresh evergreen you haul into your living room every December. Mold spores can cling to the tree and multiply indoors. In a 2007 study, Dr. Santilli set up a real Christmas tree in a home and found that mold counts increased fivefold after 2 weeks. "It's like bringing a pile of leaves into the house," he says. "Even if you aren't allergic, the mold could still cause irritation, leading to upper respiratory or sinus infections." Decorations stored in a damp basement or attic are also sources of mold and dust mites. The fact that you close up your house in cold weather doesn't help either. "Closing windows and turning up the heat recirculates air and raises dust that had been collecting all spring and summer," says University of Arizona pulmonologist Paul Enright, M.D. Your new strategy: Shake out the bad stuff After the holidays, pack decorations in airtight plastic tubs to block out mold and dust mites. (Cardboard encourages mold growth.) Finally, install a HEPA filter in your HVAC system. These can remove up to 99 percent of dust and other particles, Dr. Santilli says. Wicked winter health myth #2: Suicides peak over the holidays The reality is that suicides drop to a yearly low in December and peak in spring and summer, according to a 2008 study in the journal Psychiatry Research. "Social cohesion reduces risk of suicide — even if you're packed into a room with relatives you hate," Rudd says. "It makes it harder to deny the impact of your death, and offers the hope of help." But the holiday season is not without risk. British researchers found that rates of deliberate self-harm jump on New Year's Day, and the Psychiatry Research study shows that rates of suicide among men begin to rise in January from their December lows. "That sense of support from the holidays evaporates," Rudd says. "Suicidal people may expect the holidays to resolve their depression. If that doesn't happen, they can end up feeling even worse." Your new strategy: Manageable resolutions Wicked winter health myth #3: Going outside with wet hair will give you a cold Your new strategy: Don't blow it Cold or Flu? What medicine's right for you. While there's no proven way to stop the snotty virus, you can control the symptoms. If you're already infected, don't forcibly drain your schnozz — it could make matters worse. According to Dr. Gwaltney's research, the pressure of nose-blowing propels germ-laden mucus into your sinuses, potentially causing inflammation and secondary infection. Pinching your nose while sneezing could have the same effect. Cough or sneeze with nostrils open into a tissue (this also reduces droplet spread), and fight runny nose with an antihistamine, such as Dimetapp or Chlor-Trimeton, he says. Wicked winter health myth #4: Poinsettias can kill kids and pets Poison centers still receive thousands of calls about poinsettia exposures every year, but there has never been a single confirmed death. "Exposure to a little poinsettia sap from a leaf or two shouldn't cause any problems," says Edward Krenzelok, Pharm.D., director of the Pittsburgh Poison Center and author of a 1996 study that reviewed more than 22,000 cases of poinsettia exposure. "If a child or pet eats an entire plant, the sap may cause some vomiting or diarrhea." More realistic worst-case scenario: a sour taste in your leaf-eater's mouth. The fix: a glass of milk—or a dog biscuit. Your new strategy: Keep Christmas lilies out Story: Ah-choo! Cold, flu season ramps up in the U.S. Your new strategy: Brace yourself Wicked winter health myth #6: A roaring fire will keep you warm What isn't sucked entirely outside: wood smoke, which contains chemicals similar to those found in cigarettes. Smoke particles are small enough to penetrate deep into the lungs, potentially causing infection. "There are little macrophages, a type of white blood cell, in the tiny air sacs in your lungs. They're designed to grab bacteria," Smith says. "They are damaged by wood smoke, so they don't operate as well." Smoke particles may also infiltrate the bloodstream and cause heart disease, he says. A 2008 study found that air levels of benzo(a)pyrene — a potential human carcinogen — were four times higher in homes after a wood fire had blazed for an average of 8 hours. Your new strategy: A controlled burn Wicked winter health myth #7: Turkey makes you sleepy But while the culprit is indeed tryptophan, an amino acid found in turkey that spikes sleep-inducing serotonin levels in your brain, there's nothing special about the tryptophan buried in your holiday bird, says W. Christopher Winter, M.D., medical director of the sleep medicine center at Martha Jefferson Hospital in Charlottesville, Virginia. Per gram, turkey packs the same amount of the drowse-inducing stuff as chicken, and just slightly more than pork or cheese. "The real culprit is the huge carbohydrate load that you eat along with it—potatoes, dressing, rolls—which activates tryptophan," Dr. Winter says. Carbohydrates trigger the release of insulin, a hormone that clears sugars and amino acids (other than tryptophan) from your bloodstream. This elevates the tryptophan concentration in your blood, so even the relatively small dose from turkey can make you sleepy. Also at play: the size of your spread. "When you eat a massive meal, your body redirects its resources to your gut—and away from your brain," Dr. Winter explains. "This can also be sleep promoting." Your new strategy: A protein infusion © 2010 Rodale Inc. All rights reserved. This entry passed through the Full-Text RSS service — if this is your content and you're reading it on someone else's site, please read our FAQ page at fivefilters.org/content-only/faq.php This posting includes an audio/video/photo media file: Download Now |
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