Close X
Saturday, September 21, 2024
ADVT 
Health

Yoga Can Make Life Better For People With Abnormal Heart Rhythm

The Canadian Press, 14 Mar, 2016 10:59 AM
  • Yoga Can Make Life Better For People With Abnormal Heart Rhythm
Yoga may improve quality of life in patients suffering from abnormal heart rhythm because it gives them a method to gain some self control over their symptoms instead of feeling helples, says a new study.
 
The researchers examined the effects of yoga on patients with paroxysmal atrial fibrillation (AF) in which faulty electrical signals and rapid heart rate begin suddenly and then stop on their own.
 
"Many patients with paroxysmal atrial fibrillation (AF) can't live their lives as they want to -- they refuse dinners with friends, concerts and travelling - because they are afraid of an AF episode occurring," said one of the researchers Maria Wahlstrom from Sophiahemmet University in Sweden.
 
"AF episodes are accompanied by chest pain, dyspnoea and dizziness," added Wahlstrom in the study published in the European journal of cardiovascular nursing.
 
These symptoms are unpleasant and patients feel anxious, worried and stressed that an AF episode would occur. 
 
AF is the most common cardiac rhythm disorder and has no cure, the researches pointed out.
 
 
Patients with paroxysmal AF experience episodes of AF usually lasting less than 48 hours and stop by themselves, although in some patients they can last up to seven days. 
 
The team included 80 patients with paroxysmal AF who were randomised to yoga or a control group that did not do yoga. 
 
Yoga was performed for one hour, once a week, for 12 weeks in the hospital with an experienced instructor, which included light movements, deep breathing and meditation.
 
After 12 weeks, the yoga group had higher "SF-36" mental health scores, lower heart rate and lower systolic and diastolic blood pressure than the control group.
 
"We found that patients who did yoga had a better quality of life, lower heart rate and lower blood pressure than patients who did not do yoga. The breathing and movement may have beneficial effects on blood pressure," Wahlstrom stated.
 
"Patients in the yoga group said it felt good to let go of their thoughts and just be inside themselves for awhile," Wahlstrom noted.

MORE Health ARTICLES

Husky Energy Issues More Layoff Notices, Says Step Difficult But Necessary

Husky Energy Issues More Layoff Notices, Says Step Difficult But Necessary
Slumping world oil prices continue to hit Calgary’s energy industry hard as more layoffs have been announced.

Husky Energy Issues More Layoff Notices, Says Step Difficult But Necessary

Men And Women May Be Wired To Behave Differently: Study

Men And Women May Be Wired To Behave Differently: Study
Male and female behavioural differences correlate with their different brain networks, say researchers, including one of Indian origin.

Men And Women May Be Wired To Behave Differently: Study

Ottawa Proposes To Ban Plastic Microbeads In Facial Cleansers, Toothpaste

Ottawa Proposes To Ban Plastic Microbeads In Facial Cleansers, Toothpaste
  Consumers have until March 10 to make their views known, as Environment Canada works out a timetable for eliminating the environmental pollutant.

Ottawa Proposes To Ban Plastic Microbeads In Facial Cleansers, Toothpaste

Wonder Food: Did You Know That Honey Can Save You From Blindness?

Wonder Food: Did You Know That Honey Can Save You From Blindness?
Researchers discovered a powerful link between Surgihoney -- a medicinal type of honey and the destruction of Fusarium -- a fungus that can cause blindness or even death.

Wonder Food: Did You Know That Honey Can Save You From Blindness?

Living With People They Bite, Zika Mosquitoes Hard To Fight

Mosquitoes that spread the Zika virus are tough to fight because they breed close to people's homes: in the standing water of outside flower pots and dog bowls, and sometimes even in tub drains or other wet spots inside.

Living With People They Bite, Zika Mosquitoes Hard To Fight

Babies Sharing Beds With Mothers Are The Most Breastfed

Babies Sharing Beds With Mothers Are The Most Breastfed
Pregnant women who expressed a strong motivation to breastfeed were more likely to share the bed with their babies frequently, finds a new study.

Babies Sharing Beds With Mothers Are The Most Breastfed