Thursday, December 25, 2008

Heart Disease Risk May Be Reduced By Meditation (Transcendental Meditation)

Transcendental Meditation

Black adolescents with high normal blood pressure who practice transcendental meditation improve the ability of their blood vessels to relax and may reduce their risk of becoming adults with cardiovascular disease, researchers say.

After eight months of meditation, these adolescents experienced a 21 percent increase in the ability of their blood vessels to dilate compared to a 4 percent decrease experienced by their non-meditating peers, says Dr. Vernon A. Barnes, physiologist at the Medical College of Georgia's Georgia Prevention Institute and lead investigator on the study.

"Our blood vessels are not rigid pipes," says Dr. Barnes. "They need to dilate and constrict, according to the needs of the body. If this improvement in the ability to dilate can be replicated in other at-risk groups and cardiovascular disease patients, this could have important implications for inclusion of meditation programs to prevent and treat cardiovascular disease and its clinical consequences.

"We know this type of change is achievable with lipid lowering drugs, but it's remarkable that a meditation program can produce such a change," the researcher says.

In the April 2004 issue of the American Journal of Hypertension, Dr. Barnes and his colleagues reported that 15 minutes of twice-daily transcendental meditation steadily lowered the blood pressure of 156 black, inner-city adolescents and their pressures tended to stay lower.

This new study, being presented during the 63rd Annual Scientific Conference of the American Psychosomatic Society held March 2-5 in Vancouver, focused on 111 of those adolescents, 57 who meditated and 54 controls.

MCG researchers found among the meditators an increased ability of the blood vessel lining, called the endothelium, to relax. "Dysfunction in the ability of the endothelium to dilate is an early event in heart disease, a process that starts at a young age," says Dr. Barnes.

At four months and again at eight months, researchers used echocardiography to measure the diameter of the right brachial artery, the main artery that feeds the arm, before and after a blood pressure cuff was inflated for two minutes. They found essentially no difference in the ability of that vessel to relax after stress in either group at four months. But by eight months, EDAD or endothelial-dependent arterial dilation, was significantly improved in the meditators, says Dr. Barnes, noting that as with all lifestyle changes, the full benefits of meditating may take a while.

"Change can't be expected overnight," he says. "Meditation and other positive lifestyle habits such as exercising and eating right have to become part of your life, like brushing your teeth." Long-term studies are needed to determine the long-term impact of meditation on the risk of heart disease, he says.

Doctors already know that smoking, high blood pressure and cholesterol, and cardiovascular disease are all associated with decreased EDAD. "With the high prevalence of heart disease we have in our country today, this is something that should be considered," he says of meditation, which is inexpensive and has no side effects.

The obesity epidemic in the United States, he says, likely is the primary contributor to the increasing blood pressure rates in children. But obesity appears to be part of an unhealthy cycle where the stresses of everyday life - such as poverty and not feeling safe at home - contribute to bad habits such as overeating and/or eating high-fat comfort foods and not exercising. Stress also may impair sleep, preventing the body - and blood pressure - from resting and recovering.

It appears that meditating - allowing the mind to settle to minimal activity for 15 minutes twice daily - may help the meditator and his blood vessels relax in the hectic world around him.

Dr. Frank Treiber, director of MCG's Georgia Prevention Institute, and Dr. Surender Malhotra, cardiology fellow at MCG, are co-authors on the study which is highlighted as one of 10 abstract submissions to the conference viewed as having the highest potential to change clinical practice from the perspective of screening, diagnosis or treatment.

The research was funded by the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute.

Source : http:www.medicalnewstoday.com

Transcendental Meditation

Transcendental Meditation extends lifespan (Transcendental Meditation)

Transcendental Meditation

The American Journal of Cardiology reports in its May 2, 2005, issue that the Transcendental Meditation technique, a non-drug stress-reduction method, reduces death rates by 23% and extends lifespan.

The first-of-its-kind, long-term, randomized trial evaluated 202 men and women, average age 71, who had mildly elevated blood pressure. Subjects in the study participated in the Transcendental Meditation program; behavioral techniques, such as mindfulness or progressive muscle relaxation; or health education. The study tracked subjects for up to 18 years. Vital statistics were obtained from the National Death Index.

The study found that compared to combined controls, the TM group showed:

-- 23% reduction in the rate of death from all causes

-- 30% reduction in the rate of death from cardiovascular disease

-- 49% reduction in the rate of death from cancer

Transcendental Meditation Reduces Risk Factors in Heart Disease

"Research has found the Transcendental Meditation program reduces risk factors in heart disease and other chronic disorders, such as high blood pressure, smoking, psychological stress, stress hormones, harmful cholesterol, and atherosclerosis," said Robert Schneider, M.D., FACC, principal author of the study and director of the Center of Natural Medicine and Prevention.

"These reductions slow the aging process and promote the long-term reductions in death rates."

Researchers collaborated on the study from Harvard, University of Iowa, Medical College of Georgia, West Oakland Health Center, and Maharishi University of Management. The study was funded, in part, by a grant from the National Institutes of Health's National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine.

Interviews and b-roll are available.

The Center of Natural Medicine and Prevention at Maharishi University of Management in Fairfield, Iowa, was established by an $8 million grant from the National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine, a component of the National Institutes of Health, to serve as a Specialized Center for Research and to study natural medicine in relation to cardiovascular disease in minority populations.

Source : www.medicalnewstoday.com

Transcendental Meditation

Saturday, December 20, 2008

Transcendental meditation eases heart ailments (Transcendental meditation)

Transcendental meditation

A widely practised meditation technique of stress reduction has been found to be effective in decreasing the severity of congestive heart failure.

Researchers from the University of Pennsylvania evaluated the efficacy of the technique over 23 African American men and women who were recently hospitalised with New York Heart Association for congestive heart failure.

The participants, having average age of 64 years, were randomised to either the Transcendental Meditation (TM) technique or health education, in addition to usual medical care.

Boffins measured changes in the participants’ heart function with a six-minute walk test, and measures for quality of life, depression, and re-hospitalisations. Changes in outcomes from baseline to three and six months after treatment were analysed.

Lead author Dr Ravishankar Jayadevappa said that the TM group significantly improved on the six-minute walk test after both three and six months of practice compared to the control group. The group also showed improvements in quality of life measurements, depression, and had fewer re-hospitalisations.

The authors believe that TM improves heart functioning presumably by reducing sympathetic nervous system activation associated with stress that is known to contribute to the failing heart, according to the authors.

"The results indicate that TM can be effective in improving the functional capacity, and quality of life, of congestive heart failure patients. These results also suggest long-term improvements in survival in these individuals," Jayadevappa said.

by Asian News International

Transcendental meditation

Personal Life Improvement through Meditation (Transcendental Meditation)

Transcendental meditation

When a person can regulate their sources of spirituality, it brings them great pleasure. Since we all are different in nature, spirituality differs for most of us as well. The goal behind finding your spirituality is incurring a need to reach beyond to connect with your spiritual side. Whatever you find should make you feel good about you. What you find should be utilized in your journey to spirituality, helping you to develop and grow in your individuality.

We all know that prayers are powerful tools that affect attitudes. Prayers are often said on one’s behalf, or for people we know. According to few philosophers who study spirituality, each day we pray we should work in accord with that prayer. Meditation is a form of getting in touch with you, which is similar to prayer. When you pray you often, feel calm. You will feel a soothing touch graze over you. Like prayer, meditation brings us closer to who we are. You can improve your life through prayer and mediation.

Transcendental meditation

Sunday, November 23, 2008

Transcendental meditation wins against stress (Transcendental Meditation)

Transcendental Meditation

Meditation has been known to lower blood pressure, and a new study shows it also soothes the bodys damaging stress responses. A build up of those responses over time leads to development of heart disease and diabetes. Heart disease patients, average age 68, were taught how to practice transcendental meditation (TM), which originated in India and has been popular in the states since the seventies. These patients experienced decreased heart rate variability and insulin sensitivity over the 16-week trial. Chronic stress can wreak havoc on the nervous system, which controls the beat of the heart.

Cortisol and other hormones are released during stress response, along with neurotransmitters. These hormones can damage the cardiovascular system if experienced often enough, for long enough. According to the studys conclusion, transcendental meditation practice actually adjusts the bodys response to stress instead of changing the stress itself-- results similar to the physical effects of exercise conditioning. This is an important capability for those who cannot escape stress in their lives entirely.

Transcendental Meditation

Monday, November 10, 2008

Yoga Poses & Meditation : How to Practice Transcendental Meditation

Transcendental Meditation

Video source : Youtube.com
Transcendental Meditation

Thursday, November 6, 2008

Transcendental Meditation Can Help Combat Congestive Heart Failure (Transcendental Meditation)

Transcendental Meditation

ScienceDaily (Mar. 13, 2007) — In this high-tech age of modern medicine, could it be possible to treat the leading cause of death in the U.S. through the power of meditation? According to a first-of-its-kind randomized study conducted by researchers from the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, a widely practiced, stress-reducing meditation technique can significantly reduce the severity of congestive heart failure. The study appears in the Winter 2007 issue of Ethnicity & Disease.

“The results of this study indicate that transcendental meditation can be effective in improving the functional capacity and quality of life of congestive heart failure patients” said Ravishankar Jayadevappa, PhD, lead author and Research Assistant Professor in Penn’s Division of Geriatric Medicine. “These results also suggest long-term improvements in survival in these individuals.”

Jayadevappa and fellow researchers from Penn evaluated 23 African American men and women, average age 64, who were recently hospitalized with New York Heart Association class II or III congestive heart failure. Participants were randomized to either the Transcendental Meditation® (TM) technique or health education – in addition to standard medical treatment.

Researchers measured changes in heart function with a six-minute walk test, and measures for quality of life, depression, and re-hospitalizations. Changes in outcomes from baseline to three and six months after treatment were analyzed.

According to Jayadevappa, the TM group significantly improved on the six-minute walk test after both three and six months of TM practice compared to the control group. The TM group also showed improvement in quality of life measurements, depression, and had fewer re-hospitalizations.

This present finding is consistent with previous research demonstrating that Transcendental Meditation reduces factors that contribute to the cause or progression of heart failure, such a high blood pressure, stress, metabolic syndrome, left ventricular hypertrophy (enlargement of the heart) and severity of atherosclerosis (hardening of the arteries). Further validation of the outcomes of this study is planned via a large, multi-center trial with long-term follow-up.

According to the study authors, Transcendental Meditation most likely improves heart failure by reducing sympathetic nervous system activation associated with stress that is known to contribute to the failing heart.

This study was sponsored by the National Institutes of Health-National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine, in a collaboration between the University of Pennsylvania with the Institute for Natural Medicine and Prevention at Maharishi University of Management.

Transcendental Meditation

Transcendental Meditation reduces the brain's reaction to pain (Transcendental Meditation)

Transcendental Meditation

Neuroimaging of meditation's effect on brain reactivity to painLondon, UK -- Twelve healthy long-term meditators who had been practicing Transcendental Meditation for 30 years showed a 40-50% lower brain response to pain compared to 12 healthy controls, reported by a latest NeuroReport journal article, published by Lippincott Williams & Wilkins (Vol.17 No.12; 21 August 2006:1359-1363). Further, when the 12 controls then learned and practiced Transcendental Meditation for 5 months, their brain responses to pain also decreased by a comparable 40-50%. www.neuroreport.com Current issue (Aug 9)
Transcendental Meditation could reduce the brain's response to pain because neuroimaging and autonomic studies indicate that it produces a physiological state capable of modifying various kinds of pain. In time it reduces trait anxiety, improves stress reactivity and decreases distress from acute pain.

According to Orme-Johnson, lead author of this research, "Prior research indicates that Transcendental Meditation creates a more balanced outlook on life and greater equanimity in reacting to stress. This study suggests that this is not just an attitudinal change, but a fundamental change in how the brain functions".

Pain is part of everyone's experience and 50 million people worldwide suffer from chronic pain. Transcendental Meditation would have a long term effect in reducing responses in the affective component of the pain matrix. Future research could focus on other areas of the pain matrix and the possible effects of other meditation techniques to relieve pain.

Transcendental Meditation

Transcendental Meditation Effective In Reducing High Blood Pressure, Study Shows (Transcendental Meditation)

Transcendental Meditation


ScienceDaily (Dec. 5, 2007) — People with high blood pressure may find relief from transcendental meditation, according to a definitive new meta-analysis of 107 published studies on stress reduction programs and high blood pressure, which will be published in the December issue of Current Hypertension Reports.

The transcendental meditation technique produces a statistically significant reduction in high blood pressure that is not found with other forms of relaxation, meditation, biofeedback or stress management.

The new meta-analysis reviewed randomized, controlled trials of all stress reduction and relaxation methods in participants with high blood pressure that have been published in peer-reviewed scientific journals.

Blood pressure changes for the transcendental meditation technique included average reductions of 5.0 points on systolic blood pressure and 2.8 on diastolic blood pressure, which were statistically significant, according to the review. The other stress reduction programs did not show significant changes in blood pressure.

Blood pressure changes associated with transcendental meditation practice were consistent with other controlled studies showing reductions in cardiovascular risk factors, improved markers of heart disease, and reduced mortality rates among participants in the Transcendental Meditation Program.

The new meta-analysis was conducted by researchers at the NIH-funded Institute of Natural Medicine and Prevention at Maharishi University of Management and the University of Kentucky College of Medicine.

According to Dr. James Anderson, professor of medicine at the University of Kentucky and co-author of the new meta-analysis, the findings of the new review rebut a July 2007 report sponsored by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality and the NIH-National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine, which concluded that most research on meditation is low quality and found little evidence that any specific stress reduction effectively lowers blood pressure. The new meta-analysis identified all high quality meditation studies published through 2006 and rigorously analyzed their effects, which the previous government report failed to do.

Anderson said the new meta-analysis includes only high quality studies on all available stress reduction interventions. The studies on transcendental meditation were conducted at five independent universities and medical institutions, and the majority of them were funded by competitive grants from the National Institutes of Health.

"The magnitude of the changes in blood pressure with the transcendental meditation technique are at least as great as the changes found with major changes in diet or exercise that doctors often recommend," Anderson said. "Yet the transcendental meditation technique does not require changes in lifestyle. Thus many patients with mild hypertension or prehypertension may be able to avoid the need to take blood pressure medications--all of which have adverse side effects. Individuals with more severe forms of hypertension may be able to reduce the number or dosages of their BP medications under the guidance of their doctor."

Anderson added that long-term changes in blood pressure of this magnitude are associated with at least a 15 percent reduction in rates of heart attack and stroke. "This is important to everyone because cardiovascular disease is the number one cause of death in the U.S. and worldwide," Anderson said.

The study's biostatistician, Maxwell Rainforth, assistant professor of Physiology and Health Statistics at Maharishi University of Management, said the meta-analysis used state-of-the-art statistical methods to review 107 published studies in the field of stress reduction, relaxation and blood pressure. "The twenty-three separate studies included in the final analysis met well-known criteria for high scientific quality. That is, these studies used repeated blood pressure measurements and participants were randomized to either a stress reduction technique or placebo-type control for at least eight weeks. The data we used are all published in peer-reviewed scientific journals," Rainforth said.

According to Dr. Robert Schneider, director of the Institute of Natural Medicine and Prevention and co-author, this rigorously conducted meta-analysis indicates that the transcendental meditation program is distinctively effective compared to other scientifically studied techniques in lowering high blood pressure.

"For those 100 million Americans with elevated blood pressure, here is a scientifically documented, yet simple and easy way to lower blood pressure without drugs and harmful side effects. In addition, related studies show an integrated set of positive 'side benefits,' such as reduced stress, reduced heart disease levels and longer lifespan with this technique to restore balance in the cardiovascular system, mind and body," Schneider said.

Transcendental Meditation

Tuesday, September 16, 2008

Benefits of Transcendental Meditation (Transcendental Meditation)

Transcendental Meditation

To learn Transcendental Meditation you first attend a free introductory lecture, at which you learn about the value and benefits of regular practice of the technique. Robert Roth, author of the book, Transcendental Meditation, describes some of these benefits:
  • Reduced stress
  • Improved memory and learning ability
  • Increased energy
  • Increased inner calm
  • Reduced insomnia
  • Increased happiness and self-esteem
  • Reduced anxiety and depression
  • Improved relationships
  • Improved health (in many categories)
Younger biological age How do so many benefits come from one technique? After a full night of sleep you awaken refreshed, because repair and balancing mechanisms of the physiology dissolve physical, mental, and emotional stresses. Because the state of rest spontaneously induced by Transcendental Meditation is even more profound than that attained during sleep, your mind and body spontaneously release anxiety and deeply rooted stress that they would otherwise be unable to dissolve. This state of total relaxation while fully awake, or “restful alertness” as meditators refer to it, purifies and thus rejuvenates the mind and body. This inner calm allows you to make healthier lifestyle choices because you are acting from a place of calmness and orderliness in brain functioning rather than from stress.

Transcendental Meditation and high blood pressure
Transcendental Meditation enlivens your spirit, which has enormous health benefits on all levels. Medicine now recognizes the intimate connection between health and spirituality and Transcendental Meditation is recognized as a technique to accomplish this union. This chapter examines these benefits for cardiovascular disease. The National Institutes of Health recommended meditation as the first treatment for high blood pressure in 1986.
Transcendental Meditation is a simple, effortless mental technique that can be learned easily and quickly by anyone. It is practiced for twenty minutes both morning and evening. Hundreds of scientific studies worldwide over the past 30 years document benefits of the practice to both the mind and body. Because Transcendental Meditation spontaneously induces a deep state of relaxation, practitioners find it refreshing, and therefore very pleasurable to practice. This enjoyment creates an internal motivation to continue practicing the technique.
Although meditators gain great benefits from reaching a level of rest that is deeper than sleep (as measured by heart rate and oxygen consumption), Transcendental Meditation is not a substitute for sleep. A good night’s sleep is still necessary to maintain strength of the immune system, in order to fight off minor and even major threats to health.
Transcendental Meditation

Monday, September 15, 2008

Stress Reduction Meditation (Transcendental Meditation)

Transcendental Meditation

Even a year ago, it would have been hard for me to picture myself meditating. I was not a meditative person. I was what you might call a man of action. I was always on the go. I could never stop for even a moment. Every moment of my life would be filled with activities. When I wasn't working, it was racquetball. When it wasn't racquetball, I was going out drinking with my friends. Stress reduction meditation never even entered my head. I was so busy that I didn't even understand that I was stressed.

Then, all of a sudden, it hit me. I had a breakdown. It was like that. Nothing had ever happened so quickly. I was lying on the ground sobbing. My boss gave me a few weeks off work, and in the mean time I went in to see a therapist. She said that I was well-adjusted, but that I was addicted to keeping busy. I needed to try some mindfulness stress reduction meditation. I thought she was a quack at first. I did not need meditation stress reduction. I just needed a week or two off, at least that is what my boss told me. She said that it wasn't that simple. Without stress reduction meditation, I would continue to feel the same internal tensions. I would stay tense until I boiled over again.

I certainly didn't want that. One breakdown was embarrassing enough. I tried stress reduction meditation tapes. At first, I couldn't even bring myself to take it seriously. I put on stress reduction tapes, heard the soothing voice and the chimes, and burst into laughter. After a while, though, I realized that I was just wasting my time. I had to take the stress reduction meditation seriously or I should give it up altogether. I decided to give it a go. I did stress reduction meditation every morning for a week. My daily meditation worked wonders. After only one week, I felt much calmer. I could relax and take it easy without worrying. I did not need to always be running around. It changed my life!

Even if you don't live a busy life like I do, stress reduction meditation can be valuable. Whether you take a stress reduction meditation course, or used tapes like I did, it can change your life. Even if you only take 30 minutes a day, it can be enough to profoundly affect the way you see the world. Mindfulness meditation is a powerful and helpful tool.

Transcendental Meditation

Monday, September 8, 2008

Transcendental Meditation Practices (Transcendental Meditation)

Transcendental Meditation


Transcendental Meditation is a technique of meditation originally introduced in the West about the year 1958. This type of meditation technique was introduced by Maharishi Mahesh Yogi and say a short period of meditation. Transcendental Meditation is recommended twice a day for only twenty minutes per session. As with other methods of meditation and practices, is a target of transcendental meditation is enlightenment. The technique claims to be able to improve a person by the person individual efforts.

It is not difficult to learn transcendental meditation. If you are looking to escape from the whirlwind of ringing cell phones, traffic snarls and screaming kids, transcendental meditation can provide a peaceful getaway from the craziness of everyday life.

You may be wondering what is transcendental meditation and what makes it different from other forms of meditation? One of the most exciting elements of the transcendental meditation technique is that it so simple and easy to practice. With the right focus and dedication, you can learn transcendental meditation in a matter of moments.

Basically, during the meditation session, your body enters a deep and peaceful state of relaxation, while maintaining alertness and clarity. First, the person chooses a word or image to focus on, perhaps a religious or cultural symbol that has special meaning. As the person replays this word or image over and over, the body descends into a deeper and deeper state of restfulness. The session can last anywhere from 10 minutes to an hour and should take place in a calm and relaxed setting, with minimal noise and distractions.

No other meditation technique has been so extensively studied and researched. During transcendental meditation, the brain falls into a theta brain wave pattern (akin to sleep and deep relaxation), which then carries over to the state of wakefulness. Physical benefits include increased mental comprehension, focus, retention and creativity. Another interesting benefit is the actual reversal of the aging process. In a study conducted by the International Journal of Neuroscience, the biological age of practitioners of transcendental meditation was, on average, twelve years younger than their chronological age. Transcendental meditation also has positive effects on age and stress related conditions such as insomnia, high blood pressure, decreased visual acuity, hearing loss and depressed cerebral blood flow.

Studies have also shown that transcendental meditation can greatly reduce mental issues, such as desire for alcohol, drugs, and nicotine, and stress issues. The knowledge that stress itself can lead to many physical ailments makes this process almost priceless to one who would hold his or her health in high regard.

Although there are very many doubtful comments still floating heavily around the medical community. However, the National Institute of Health has obviously given the process some solid credibility as they have invested well over twenty million dollars in research funds towards the long-term effects of transcendental meditation on the human heart.

Transcendental Meditation

Transcendental Meditation

Transcendental Meditation

Transcendental meditation is a movement founded by Maharishi (Maharishi Mahesh Yogi) in 1957. It started with an organization named Spiritual Regeneration Movement. Maharishi aimed to establish a teaching center of transcendental meditation for every million people of the world's population.

The whole process takes fifteen to twenty minutes everyday. During the meditation, the person focuses his or her mind on a simple statement that is called a mantra. The ultimate goal, as practitioners say, is to achieve pure consciousness. The exact procedures of transcendental meditation cannot be simply learned by reading available materials. They have to be taught by a transcendental meditation expert.

However, there have been studies that say transcendental meditation has negative effects. A scientist in an American institute said that the whole process of such meditation could be hazardous to the mental health of a certain person. The weight of the impact depends on how long the person has been practicing transcendental meditation.

Transcendental meditation has also been criticized because of the exorbitant fees that go with learning them. As of the year 2000, fees have been reported to reach as much as $2,500. Other critics even point that the fee does not make sense because the founder, Maharishi, even stated that such meditation is a birthright.

Aside from these, transcendental meditation also earned the ire of a number of people because of its strict policies, particularly those that relate to building structures. Maharishi declared that all buildings should be constructed based on an Indian philosophy that can be compared to Feng Shui. In this belief, the main entrance of the structure must face the east and the rooms should be arranged in a circular fashion. The rooms should revolve around a central area called the seat of divinity. Because of their strict adherence to this belief, there was even a time when a Catholic church situated in a Maharishian university was demolished because it did not abide by the rules of this Indian philosophy.

While there may be criticisms on the practice of transcendental meditation, there have also been studies that say the process is helpful in improving blood flow. In the end, the decision to practice transcendental meditation, or any kind of meditation for that matter, still lies on the convictions of an individual.

Author : Eddie Tobey

Transcendental Meditation
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