Writers' Community!

Search:

Writers' Community!

SearchWarp Home Submit An Article Frequently Asked Questions Contact Author Login
Article Submission
We Need YOUR Articles!
We'll Promote Them for FREE!

Author Login

New Authors
Register Here


Now Serving 5,249 Authors
44,586 Quality Articles
& 1,895 Current Users Online!
Featured Authors
Dianne M. Buxton is a fan of:
Susan Thom (8,103)
Pat Heydlauff (338)
Judi Lake (2,193)
Marty RicKard (2,456)
Most Recent
Healthy Fats For Ballet Dancers and Other Athletes

Train Your Brain and Activate the Body Mind Connection by Watching the Best Ballet Movies

How To Learn Magic and Become a Magician….

The Nervous Anticipation of Going Back to School For Ballet

How To Understand Ballet Stores and the Pointe Shoes They Do or Do Not Carry

Highly Effective Tips For Understanding How to Prevent Knee Injuries in Ballet and Dance

How Can I Improve the Basics of My Ballet Training Without A Professional Ballet School?

Back to School in Ballet Shoes and Pointe Shoes - Organize Your Life and Nurture Your Spirit

Better Self Care in Ballet Training

How to Avoid Overuse of the Achilles Tendon in Sports and Ballet

Home » Categories » Arts, Crafts & Hobbies » Performing Arts » How to Avoid Developing Chronic Joint Pain If You Are a Dancer Or an Athlete » Reprint Rights » Printer Friendly

How to Avoid Developing Chronic Joint Pain If You Are a Dancer Or an Athlete

Rated 3 out of 5
Rate It  /  View Comments  /  View All Articles submitted by Dianne M. Buxton
Submitted Sunday, June 29, 2008
Submitted by: Dianne M. Buxton (3,037) Bronze Level Author Hall of Fame Top 100 Verified Account Dianne M. Buxton blog Contact Dianne M. Buxton
http://www.theballetstore.com
Log in to become a member of Dianne M. Buxton's Fan Club!


It is vital to understand the role of inflammation in the body, for anyone, but especially would-be ballerinas, men in ballet, and athletes. Whether you are looking for a career builder or just enjoy the challenge of training, it is important to know how to maintain the soft tissues of the body that get worn out on practically a daily basis. To prevent ballet and sports injuries, good training and good work habits are required. For better rehabilitation, once an injury occurs, adding omega 3 oils to your nutrition is a tremendous help to diminish the natural inflammation response.

Inflammation occurs naturally as a response to injury or immune attack. It is temporary, and we recover. In a healthy body, damaged tissues are removed and replaced with new tissue.

In a body that has a low grade chronic inflammation, in the blood and soft tissues, better recovery may not be as speedy, and may never be complete. Joint injuries are supposed to give you trouble for the rest of your life, although maybe not until you are older, then you are to expect arthritis in a damaged joint, if not in every joint. Why is this?

What causes chronic inflammation in your body? Why would a young vibrant person in a developed country who has access to good food, good water, vitamin and mineral supplements have a low grade (or not so low) chronic inflammatory condition?

Sugar is one issue. And artificial sweeteners. Don't eat them. Sorry.

Bonnie C. Minsky has an excellent article with more detail about this.

Andrew Weil, holistic health M.D., Nicholas Perricone, M.D., an anti-aging expert, Jeffrey Bland, Ph.D, an allergy nutritionist, all write about inflammation as a major cause of disease. But you can avoid it.

Think a moment about all the good stuff you eat - lean beef, chicken, cold water fish like salmon, tuna, mackerel, and sardines. Salads, vegetables - are you not doing everything right? How could you not rehabilitate quickly and completely from a minor dance or sports injury? You are eating all the right stuff! You are working out in pointe shoes or shooting baskets daily. Why would you not recover one hundred per cent?

Here's the reality. We eat beef and poultry and eggs from the poultry, that are grain fed. That means that the fats from those foods are predominantly omega 6 fatty acids. They are not bad fats. However, omega 6 oils in the body support pro-inflammatory pathways. They promote inflammation.

But grass fed beef and poultry do not fill us with so much omega 6 fats. And as lean as you want to eat, for weight loss, or weight maintenance, some daily animal fat is crucial for your health. Eat the grass fed as much as you can.

More bad news - fast foods and processed foods contain omega 6 oils. So much for that convenience.

More bad news - you cannot eat too much cold water fish because of the pollutants in them, mainly mercury. But the good news is, you can now get ultra purified or pharmaceutical grade, fish oils as a nutritional supplement.

You can also decrease your ingestion of omega 6 fats by avoiding all the bottled salad dressings and most bottled vegetable oils that you find at the grocery store. Except for olive oil, avocado oil, walnut oil and flaxseed oil, (and I'm only including here the more typically available oils, there are more), vegetable oils too are omega 6 oils and will promote inflammation in your body.

This sounds pretty hopeless, but here is the good news. Omega 3 oils are anti-inflammatory and are also readily available. If you are willing to make a small lifestyle change, or get your mother/child/wife/husband/girlfriend/boyfriend/cook, or whoever does the shopping and food prep at home to do so (they will thank you big time), you can switch to omega 3 oils,

If your current training is a career building plan, this information is crucial. If you are training for personal enjoyment, it is important for health too. Being athletic doesn't make arthritis a given in your future. Joint pain can be relieved by decreasing inflammation. Inflammation can be decreased by diet. It is really pretty simple.

I hope that if you are a young ballerina, among the men in ballet, or a young athlete, that you will have your parents read this article. I can only touch the tip of the iceberg here, in the topic of omega 3 oils and their anti-inflammatory properties. But the facts seem to indicate that balancing omega 6 fatty acids in your diet with omega 3 oils, would affect your family health for the better. Dance and sports injuries may be in their past or present too.

Bonnie C. Minsky's article is at http://www.consciouschoice.com/2004/cc1706/healthconscious1706.html.

For more information about healthy oils, go to http://www.antiinflammatoryomegas.blogspot.com.




This author of this Article has choosen to make this article available with free reprint rights.
Click here to copy this article.

Reprint Rights

Log in to become a member of Dianne M. Buxton's Fan Club!

Comments on this article:
No comments yet.


Was this article helpful to you? Leave a Public Comment or Question:

 

This Article has been viewed 15 times.
Article added to SearchWarp.com on Sunday, June 29, 2008
View other articles written by Dianne M. Buxton (3,037) Bronze Level Author Hall of Fame Top 100 Verified Account Dianne M. Buxton blog Contact Dianne M. Buxton


If you found this article interesting, you may want to check out:

Disclaimer:  All information on this site is provided for informational purposes only! By no means is any information presented herein intended to substitute for the advice provided to you by any health care or other professional or organization.


Today's Most Popular
How To Overcome Your Stage Fright

Getting that Call Back and other Audition Tips

Setting Realistic Goals In Preparing For Pointe Shoes

Higher SAT Scores From Ballet Class and Pointe Shoes?

Practical Tips on Voice Care for Contemporary Singers

How to Choose A Ballet Teacher/Feet and Turnout

Beginner Acoustic Guitar - Tips and Lessons for Better Guitar Playing

7 Highly Effective Habits For Using Every Ballet Exercise To Develop The Perfect Pointe

The Perfect Battement Tendu - French Ballet Word For Stretched

Criss Angel Magic Secrets

Home  |  FAQ's  |  Contact  |  Terms of Service  |  Article Submission Guidelines  |  Writers' Contests  |  Privacy  |  Mission / About
Copyright © 1999-2008 SearchWarp.com, All Rights Reserved - SearchWarp.com is an IcoLogic, Inc. Company